Linty Fresh
Junior Member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2005
- Messages
- 58
OK, so I start out with this:
Integral (e^2x-2x)^2(e^2x-1) dx
And I want to use substitution to solve it. I know that the derivative of (e^2x-2x) is e^2x-2, but I'm not sure what to multiply (e^2x-1) dx by to get that? Could someone please help me get started? Or am I going about this wrong? Should I just multiply the whole thing out and find the integral of the total? Many thanks.
Integral (e^2x-2x)^2(e^2x-1) dx
And I want to use substitution to solve it. I know that the derivative of (e^2x-2x) is e^2x-2, but I'm not sure what to multiply (e^2x-1) dx by to get that? Could someone please help me get started? Or am I going about this wrong? Should I just multiply the whole thing out and find the integral of the total? Many thanks.