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Homework Statement
Suppose that we have N : \mathbb{R}\cup\{-\infty,\infty\} \to [0,1] which is the standard normal cumulative distribution function. It is right-continuous.
What I want to evaluate is \lim_{b\to 0^+}N(\frac{a}{b}), where a \in \mathbb{R}^+, and alternatively where a \in \mathbb{R}^-
2. The attempt at a solution
I opened a thread yesterday on the same topic but the consequences of the fact that N(.) is right-continuous wasn't answered/addressed, which is why I decided to re-open and start fresh so that we can focus on this one aspect.
I already know that N(-\infty) and N(\infty) are well defined to equal 0 and 1 respectively, so that's not what I'm asking :).
Please focus on whether I can push the limits inside of N(.) under both a > 0 and a < 0 under the condition that N(.) is right-continuous.
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Refresher: right continuous at c means that \lim_{x \to c^+}f(x) = f(c).
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