EdTheHead Posted April 14, 2010 Posted April 14, 2010 I ran into this problem here [math]\int {1}{x^2 + 7x + 10}dx[/math] and the only way I can think of to solve this kinda thing is to do a substitution and get [math]u^-1[/math] but in this case I have no idea how to turn the substitute in the du. Is this a trig substitution problem?
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted April 14, 2010 Posted April 14, 2010 Did you mean this? [math]\int \frac{1}{x^2 + 7x +10}\, dx[/math] If so, you can probably do this: [math]\int \frac{1}{(x + 2)(x+5)} \, dx[/math] and use partial fraction decomposition to solve it.
EdTheHead Posted April 14, 2010 Author Posted April 14, 2010 Sorry yeah thats what I meant. Ah right I didn't think of partial fractions thanks.
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