I wanted to know who has decided that for the calculation of the limits of the following forms,
$$\color{orange}{\frac{0}{0},\quad \frac{\infty}{\infty},\quad 0\cdot\infty,\quad 1^\infty,\quad 0^0,\quad +\infty-\infty}$$
are called indeterminate forms. For example, it would be spontaneous to me to say that
$$1^{\infty}=1\cdots 1 \cdots 1 =1$$
or $$0^0=1$$
It depends where you look. Many people define $0^0 = 1$. The problem is that there is not one solution that makes sense. Take for example $1^\infty$. You would like to have some kind of continuity, but for every $x > 1$, you have $x^\infty = \infty$ and for $0 < x < 1$, you have $x^\infty = 0$. Why should $1^\infty$ have one specific value in between?
For $0^0$, you can plot $x^y$ on wolframalpha and you will see that there are many possibilities to define $0^0$ as limit $x \to 0$ and $y\to 0$, depending on the direction you take.
As for fractions of the form $0/0$ or $\infty/\infty$, how do you want to define them? As limits? How would you like to distinguish $$ \lim_{x\to 0} \dfrac{x}{x} = 1 $$ or $$ \lim_{x\downarrow 0} \dfrac{x}{x^2} = +\infty $$ or $$\lim_{x\uparrow 0} \dfrac{x}{x^2} = -\infty$$ or $$\lim_{x\to 0} \dfrac{x^2}{x} = 0?$$ There are so many limits which could be interpreted as $0/0$ that it makes no sense to choose between them. And this is true for every indeterminate form.