| - & < 0 | = & < 0- ∞ < 0
I tried

limit as x approaches zero of the function 1/x is infinity. However dividing by zero is an illegal mathematics operation. So technically correct, however doing such an action is invalid, so dq.It is related to the "poll" but isn't exactly a math problem. I just thought it was an interesting bit of mathematics history. 1/0 isn't undefined, 1/0= ∞ !!!!!
Oh, I know. I'm failing calculus, remember?limit as x approaches zero of the function 1/x is infinity. However dividing by zero is an illegal mathematics operation. So technically correct, however doing such an action is invalid, so dq.
Division should be an operation inverse to multiplication, that is, it should satisfy
xy=z if and only if x=z/y
So long as y is not 0, that works. That is to say, given any number z and any nonzero number y, there is one and only one number x such that xy=z, and that number is denoted z/y.
But that doesn't work when y equals 0. It is not the case for any number z that there is one and only one number x such that x0=z.
If z=1, as in this question, in order for 1/0 to exist, it is required that there is one and only one number x such that x0=1. But there are no such xx because x0=0, not 1.
So 1/0 cannot be a number.