loljemsta said:haha assuming hes doing ext 2....by why make it any harder
haha yeah you probably could..jb_nc said:You could use integration by parts too, couldn't you?
Integration by parts for this question was fun enough to keep me occupied for a couple of minuteselseany said:oooer nichole on the ball !
btw being pedantic here, but just incase you didnt realise you cant integrate anything in degrees, its not possible to use degrees with any form of calculus, its the reason why radians were invented.
and lol, im soo bored that i tried to do it with parts, you need two applications for it to come out.
ahh..akuchan said:actually the actual question was integrate sin^2 x(degrees) lol
and that changes to 180/pi or something (guessing) and i get a slightly different final answer than the book =/
You wouldn't have got sin pi/90, but sin (x*pi/90), and when you multiply x*pi/90 by 180/pi to convert it back to degrees again, yes, you would get sin 2x(degrees).akuchan said:i do know radians lol sort of
answer is 1/2 (x - 90/pi sin (2x)degrees) + C ...=/
if i got sin pi/90 would that equal the sin 2x degrees and still be right
i had a go, got it wrong -- waiting until semester 2jemsta said:haha i got a feeling the integration by parts is going to be a lot more tedious
but then again, itll help if youre an ext 2 student