This seems trivial but I just want to be careful about it. By definition, I would like <munder>

Damon Stokes

Damon Stokes

Answered question

2022-06-21

This seems trivial but I just want to be careful about it. By definition, I would like lim n P ( | X n μ | > ϵ ) = 0 for ϵ > 0. But can I just rewrite it as lim n P ( | X n lim n μ n | > ϵ ) = 0 and bring the limit out from there? That seems really odd to me.

Answer & Explanation

Leland Ochoa

Leland Ochoa

Beginner2022-06-22Added 25 answers

There is a problem with writing
lim n P ( | X n lim n μ n | > ϵ ) = 0
which is that the n in the outer limit and the n in the inner limit are two different dummy variables. Each is only defined with the confines of its own limit. But because one limit is inside the other the n in μ n is ambiguous. Is it the n of the inner limit, or of the outer limit? In this case, it isn't hard to figure out, but you shouldn't have to figure it out.
The correct usage is to have different variable names:
lim n P ( | X n lim m μ m | > ϵ ) = 0
I'm sure that spoils your next step, which I guess would have been to say
lim n P ( | X n μ n | > ϵ ) = 0
But this is something you need to justify in a more rigorous fashion.

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