I think that it is fair to say that students are just expected to have learned some basic facts about the topics.How do you get that solution, though? I don't know how to actually equate that.
Please check to see if there is a typo. This sum does not converge. Are we, perhaps, subtracting the two series?
If by "questions" you mean "summations", you can't split them, because neither of them converges, as the terms in each case approach 1, not 0. That also implies that their sum approaches 2, so the whole summation can't converge. I agree with topsquark in questioning it.As for the dual fraction question, I realize that I can also split it into two separate questions as well. Those would be n/(n+1) and (n+2)/(n+3). Again, I got stuck at that point, and I need help to proceed on both questions.
I'm supposed to show why an expression might diverge, or what the expression converges to.
Combine the two fractions:I still don't know how to handle the twin sums. I feel that I need a hint to continue, aside from splitting up the expression.