I just finished my first semester of calc (Got a B)
We covered derivatives and I know that the next 10 weeks of calc are about integrals and antiderivatives, so I figured I'd try to brush up on my calc over christmas and hopefully teach myself the next part of calc to free up my time for Physics when next semester rolls around.
So i've been doing antiderivatives and i get them for the most part but one that i don't understand is.
(x is a theta in the book)
Sin(x) / Cos(x)^2
I got the answer to be 1 / Cos(x) + C (which is correct according to me checking it with a computer) but the way I did it was figuring that the bottom must be Cos(x) since in the quoteint rule of a derivative the bottom is squared, so i imagined differentiating a function with the quoteint rule and got it.
But what would i have done if the term on the bottom was more nasty, say Tan(x)^3 or something where the method I used wouldn't have worked. How would i approach a similar problem.
As always your help is greatly appreciated.
We covered derivatives and I know that the next 10 weeks of calc are about integrals and antiderivatives, so I figured I'd try to brush up on my calc over christmas and hopefully teach myself the next part of calc to free up my time for Physics when next semester rolls around.
So i've been doing antiderivatives and i get them for the most part but one that i don't understand is.
(x is a theta in the book)
Sin(x) / Cos(x)^2
I got the answer to be 1 / Cos(x) + C (which is correct according to me checking it with a computer) but the way I did it was figuring that the bottom must be Cos(x) since in the quoteint rule of a derivative the bottom is squared, so i imagined differentiating a function with the quoteint rule and got it.
But what would i have done if the term on the bottom was more nasty, say Tan(x)^3 or something where the method I used wouldn't have worked. How would i approach a similar problem.
As always your help is greatly appreciated.