Yes. To the question "because it's so small". No. To the suggestion that something was removed.
Derivatives have to do with limits. Physicists have casual ways of dealing with those, but mathematicians are generally backing them up, especially when there is no pathological behaviour (discontinuities or discontinuous derivatives).
You know that e.g. ##\frac{d}{dl}(l^2)=2l## is a limit: ##\frac{d}{dl}(l^2)\equiv\displaystyle\lim_{dl\downarrow 0}\frac{(l+dl)^2-l^2}{dl}##. Here you don't remove anything, you just take a limit. You did that when you learned about differentiating.
The casual way is to treat the buggers as quotients (Δ instead of ##d##, if you want to be explicit) and not to worry too much about taking limits until it matters.
We write ##d(l^2)=2l\enspace dl## without thinking, in the certainty that a more formal treatment makes no difference.
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It's weekend, so I'll also expand on
(my attempt at using LATEX was an utter epic failure.)
I learned ##\TeX## thirty years ago and still benefit from the investment. Knuth deserves something equivalent to the Nobel prize for TeX in itself (an equivalent, because supporting science and even making science possible for some reason isn't counted as science). Either that or because mathematics doesn't have a Nobel prize (but how about physics? they benefit!).
Life was tougher in those days. Nowadays with cutting and pasting you get a leg-up that makes it three to four times easier. The future will be even better. Failure is no reason to not try again (and fail better...).
Depending on where you are heading, the investment is well worth it. MS equation editor IS TeX under the hood (and it sucks).
Learning things under pressure is no good. So if you have to hand in your HW tomorrow, don't bother. But recreationally learning TeX is fun, I assure you. Sniff
How to Type Mathematical Equations or some TeX turorial and discover a world of beauty!