Help derivation arctan

hellothere

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hi guys (and gals)

i have a math presentation on monday and i really cant solve this derivate. could you help me?

f(x)= arctan^2 (ln (x-1))

f'(x)= ?

thanks in advance
 
hi guys (and gals)

i have a math presentation on monday and i really cant solve this derivate. could you help me?

f(x)= arctan^2 (ln (x-1))

I assume your problem is:

f(x) = [arctan{ln(x-1)}]2

f'(x)= ?

thanks in advance

Use substitution

u = ln(x-1)

f = [tan-1(u)]2

then

\(\displaystyle \frac{df}{dx} \ = \ \frac{df}{du} \cdot \frac{du}{dx}\)
 
im sorry to bother you again.

but im from Portugal and in here we really dont use that method and i dont quite fully understand it.

could you break it down step by step please?
 
Then what do you know?

Do you know the derivative of arctan(x)?
Do you know the derivative of ln(x)?
Do you know the "chain rule"?
 
of course i know the chain rule.

and those other derivatives tou mentioned. i just dont understand that thing with the dx´s and du´s

is that just another way of representing the chain rule?
 
of course i know the chain rule.

and those other derivatives tou mentioned. i just dont understand that thing with the dx´s and du´s

is that just another way of representing the chain rule?

If by - that - you mean:

\(\displaystyle \dfrac{df}{dx} \ = \ \dfrac{df}{du} \cdot \dfrac{du}{dx}\)


Then yes - it is the chain rule mathematically expressed (everywhere in the world using english script).
 
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of course i know the chain rule.

and those other derivatives tou mentioned. i just dont understand that thing with the dx´s and du´s

is that just another way of representing the chain rule?
I'm not sure I would call it another way! Exactly what form did you learn for the chain rule?

In any case, the derivative of f(x)= arctan^2 (ln (x-1)) is 2 times arctan(ln(x-1)) times the derivative of arctan(x)(replacing "x" in the derivative with "ln(x- 1)") times the derivative of ln(x) (replacing "x" in the derivative with "x- 1") times the derivative of x- 1. You say you know all those derivatives, so- go to it.

A very precise statement of the chain rule for this would be:
Let u= x- 1 so f(u)= arctan^2(ln(u)).
Let v= ln(u) so f(v)= arctan^2(v).
Let w= arctan(v) so f(w)= w^2.

Then the chain rule says that \(\displaystyle \frac{df}{dx}= \frac{df}{dw}\frac{dw}{dv}\frac{dv}{du}\frac{du}{dx}\).
 
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