The sum clearly diverges. This is indisputable. The point of the claim above, that

is to demonstrate that a sum of infinitely many terms can be manipulated in a variety of ways to end up with a contradictory result. It's an artifact of trying to do computations with an infinite number of terms.
The mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan famously demonstrated the above as follows: Suppose the series converges to some constant, call it

. Then

Now, recall the geometric power series

which holds for any

. It has derivative

Taking

, we end up with

and so

But as mentioned above, neither power series converges unless

. What Ramanujan did was to consider the sum

as a limit of the power series evaluated at

:

then arrived at the conclusion that

.
But again, let's emphasize that this result is patently wrong, and only serves to demonstrate that one can't manipulate a sum of infinitely many terms like one would a sum of a finite number of terms.
69 out of 100 because if you turn 3/10 into a fraction with a like denominator as 39/100 you get 30/100 and then you add 39 and 30 and get 69/100
The answer is true because it is the same
Answer:
False. They will be parallel to each other
Amount saved by Nicole is $ 105
<em><u>Solution:</u></em>
Given that Patrician saves $ 1.20 everyday and Nicole saves $ 2.80 daily
The two girls saved $ 150.00 together
To find: Amount saved by Nicole
Let "x" be the number of days for which Patrician and Nicole saved money
Given that they both saved $ 150.00 together
<em><u>So we can frame a equation as:</u></em>


<em><u>Therefore amount saved by nicole:</u></em>
Nicole has saved $ 2.80 daily for "x" days

Thus amount saved by Nicole is $ 105