Risking to be downvoted, here is a very lightweight question.
In various fields - say, algebraic geometry, nonstandard analysis, synthetic differential geometry - infinitely small quantities, i. e. those very-very close to zero, are represented by nilpotents, sometimes just square zero elements suffice to do quite a big portion of analysis. To give just one example, a generic $\varepsilon$ with $\varepsilon^2=0$ is used to represent things like tangent vectors, etc.
Now thinking about $q$-analogs, like $q$-derivative and similar gadgets, I am wondering what is the multiplicative analog of the above? That is, is there a way to capture algebraically quantities very-very close to 1? Or concisely -
"$\varepsilon$ very-very close to zero" is to "$\varepsilon^2=0$"
as
"$q$ very-very close to 1" is to what?