I've been having trouble using the definition of a limit to prove limits, and at the moment I am trying to prove that $$\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{n^x}{n!}=0$$
for all $x$ which are elements of natural numbers. I'm able to start the usual setup, namely let $0<\epsilon$ and attempt to obtain $\left\lvert\dfrac {n^x}{n!}\right\rvert <\epsilon$. I don't really feel like this is correct, and I have absolutely no idea how to go about proving this. Any help at all would be very much appreciated!
$$\frac{n^x}{n!}\frac{(n+1)!}{(n+1)^x}=\frac{n+1}{((1+1/n)^n)^{x/n}}$$
The denominator tends to $e^{0}=1$ and the numerator tends to $+\infty$.
– olsen5 Oct 28 '17 at 20:42