rhololkeolke
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Homework Statement
The problem is to either find the limit or show that it does not exist lim_{(x,y)\rightarrow(2,-2)}\frac{4-xy}{4+xy}
I've been able to do similar problems to this such as
lim_{(x,y)\rightarrow(0,0)}\frac{xy}{x^2+y^2} where I took two different paths to the limit and found that they were not equal and so it didn't exist. However, for this one I can't seem to pick a function that gives me a limit that exists let alone two functions that give me two different limits.
I've tried coming from the following paths for the problem
y=-x
y=x-4
y=-2
y=x^2-6
x=2
No matter which one I do I can't seem to get anything to cancel out in order to simplify it to one that I can perform the limit on. Are there two functions that I can use to get this limit and how would I find these. If there aren't then how would I prove that this limit exists?