I don't really understand how one can find the type of singularities for a given function. Say if $$f(z) = \frac{z}{e^z-1}$$ then I know that the singularities are at $z = 2n\pi i$
However, how do I find the type? If I try to write out Laurent series for this by using $$e^z = 1 + z + z^2/2! + z^3/3! + \cdots $$, then I got a summation in the denominator, which I don't know how to rearrange as a Laurent series.
Can anyone please give me a hint?
On $z=0$ you can remove the singularity.
For the other use that a singularity at $z_0$ is a pole of order $k$ when $f(z)\cdot (z-z_0)^k$ does have a removable singularity at $z_0$.