Md. Abde Mannaf said:
very very large number is not infinity?
In the context of limits, infinity is not a number. It is more of a boundary. No number is larger than infinity in this sense. No number is even equal to infinity.
When one sees "x-> oo" used in the bounds of a limit, it is an abuse of notation that should be read "as x increases without bound".
When one sees "oo" used as the value of a limit, it is an abuse of notation that should be read as a statement that the limit does not exist and that it does not exist in a particular way.
One can go a step further and think of numbers that are larger and larger as being closer and closer to "infinity". This involves modifying our usual notion of "closeness" where we decide how close two numbers are by looking at the absolute value of their difference. [Since infinity is not a number, that difference would be undefined]. This process amounts to defining a "topology" on an extended set that includes two new members: +oo and -oo.
Defining this topology effectively gives you two new positions on an extended number line. The old number line had no end points. The new one has a new right hand endpoint and a new left hand endpoint. This process can be called "the two point compactification of the reals".
Doing this just defines the new positions. It does not necessarily define any arithmetic operations on those positions.
With this two point compactification in hand, one can go back and re-interpret the limit notation
When one sees "x -> oo" used in the bounds of limit, it is correct notation that can be read as "as x approaches positive infinity"
When one sees "oo" used as the value of the limit, it is correct notation that indicates that the limit is infinity.
Note that although it is tempting to go ahead and define arithmetic operations on +oo and -oo, it is not possible to do so in a way that preserves all of the axioms of the real numbers as an ordered field. Accordingly, although one can use +oo and -oo as bounds for limits or as the result of a limit, one cannot use them in ordinary arithmetic operations or produce them as the result of an ordinary arithmetic operation.