I'm currently studying for my real analysis 1 midterm Thursday and I'm trying to learn epsilon-delta proofs. Unfortunately, my instructor has decided to use a custom textbook that has no examples in it and he uses class time for group discussions instead of actually lecturing. I'm trying to solve delta-epsilon proofs I find online, including this website, but I have a question about writing proofs that involve letting delta be the minimum of two options.
Here is the problem I found online that I'm currently stuck on:
Prove that x$^2$ + 3 goes to 4 as x goes to 1.
Here's my proof:
Assume $\epsilon$ > 0 is given. Let $\delta$ = min(1, $\frac{\epsilon}{3}$). Since $\epsilon$ > 0, we also have that $\delta$ > 0. Now, for every x, 0 < |x - a| < $\delta$ implies |x - 1| < ...
Now this is where I'm unsure of how to proceed. The website I found the problem on has hints to construct the delta so that's how I was able to find that, but then it does not tell you how to move forward to prove the limit. Am I supposed to include two cases here, one when $\delta$ = 1 and another when $\delta$ = $\epsilon$/3, or can I just work forward with the delta involving epsilon? If anyone would be so kind as to clear this bit of confusion up for me, I'm confident I can prove the limit with no troubles. I'm just unsure of how to proceed at this specific step because I can't seem to find a worked example of such a case that covers more than finding the delta in such a situation.
If anyone would be willing to clear this up for me (one line saying "do two cases" or "use the epsilon" would be all I need), I'd be greatly appreciative. Thank you.