ekoolish
Impossible?
Differentiate using the most appropriate method.
xsqrd+x+1/2sqrootx
ty
xsqrd+x+1/2sqrootx
ty
i see no 'appropriate method'. I see, splitting the fraction. so it'd be x^2 / 2rootx + x/2rootx + 1/2rootx and then 2 unit integration from there.ekoolish said:Differentiate using the most appropriate method.
xsqrd+x+1/2sqrootx
ty
the formerJust.Snaz said:i see no 'appropriate method'. I see, splitting the fraction. so it'd be x^2 / 2rootx + x/2rootx + 1/2rootx and then 2 unit integration from there.
Also, you don't have to put "easy 4u, not 4me". We won't bite/attack you if you can't do an 'easy' question
EDIT: is that [x^2 + x + 1]/2rootx ? or x^2 + x + (1/2rootx) ?
lol what? why, it's just normal integration. Don't over complicate, I used to do that heaps, not good. Just think simple first.ekoolish said:btw we havent learnt intergration yet so i was thinking of either the quotient,chain or product rule?
*sigh* We haven't learnt intergration...Just.Snaz said:lol what? why, it's just normal integration. Don't over complicate, I used to do that heaps, not good. Just think simple first.
And well, after I split the fraction, x^2/root x becomes x^(3/2).. and for x/rootx , it becomes, x^(1/2) and 1/rootx = x^(-1/2). you can take the 1/2 outside and then just integrate.
ohhhh. terribly sorry. took 4u as 4 unit. You learn integration in 4 unit as well.ekoolish said:*sigh* We haven't learnt intergration...
anyone?
Just.Snaz said:ohhhh. terribly sorry. took 4u as 4 unit. You learn integration in 4 unit as well.
I don't know how you could use either rule. just. the rule for integration is x^n becomes x^(n+1) / n+1
so x^(3/2) becomes x^(5/2) / (5/2) = 2x^(5/2) / 5
and then apply to the rest? add 1 to the power and then divide by the new power.
This is a DIFFERENTIATION QUESTION!!!! ROFL!!!ekoolish said:Differentiate using the most appropriate method.
xsqrd+x+1/2sqrootx
ty
lol' k. I figured it out using the quotient rule. I hate mathsJust.Snaz said:ohhhh. terribly sorry. took 4u as 4 unit. You learn integration in 4 unit as well.
I don't know how you could use either rule. just. the rule for integration is x^n becomes x^(n+1) / n+1
so x^(3/2) becomes x^(5/2) / (5/2) = 2x^(5/2) / 5
and then apply to the rest? add 1 to the power and then divide by the new power.
Quotient rule?ekoolish said:Differentiate using the most appropriate method.
xsqrd+x+1/2sqrootx
ty
lolekoolish said:Differentiate using the most appropriate method.
xsqrd+x+1/2sqrootx
ty