(tan x/1+sec x) + (1+sec x/tan x) = 2csc x (this is the proof im working on now)
I'm not sure what to do on this one either......
Here is what i got
I got a common denominator first:
[(tan^2 x +1)+(sec^2 x)]/tan x(1+sec x)
so i remember about the identity:
tan^2 x + 1 = sec^2 x ---> so I substitute
(sec^2 x+ sec^2 x)/ tan x(1+sec x)
now i replaced everything with sines and cosines...
[(1/cos^2 x) + (1/cos^2 x)] / [(sin x/cos x)(1+(1/cos x))]
is it now time to cross cancel or is this one not possible
I'm not sure what to do on this one either......
Here is what i got
I got a common denominator first:
[(tan^2 x +1)+(sec^2 x)]/tan x(1+sec x)
so i remember about the identity:
tan^2 x + 1 = sec^2 x ---> so I substitute
(sec^2 x+ sec^2 x)/ tan x(1+sec x)
now i replaced everything with sines and cosines...
[(1/cos^2 x) + (1/cos^2 x)] / [(sin x/cos x)(1+(1/cos x))]
is it now time to cross cancel or is this one not possible