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Posted

OK, so I have several questions...

 

First, a differential is a tangent to the curve and the integral is the area between the curve, X axis, and differentials...right?

 

Second, if I have [math]y=mX^n + b[/math] it would be: [math]y=(mn)X^{n-1}[/math] for a differential, right? And [math]y=(m/n)X^{n+1} + b[/math] for an integral...right?! :confused:

Posted
OK' date=' so I have several questions...

 

First, a differential is a tangent to the curve and the integral is the area between the curve, X axis, and differentials...right?

 

Second, if I have [math']y=mX^n + b[/math] it would be: [math]y=(mn)X^{n-1}[/math] for a differential, right? And [math]y=(m/n)X^{n+1} + b[/math] for an integral...right?! :confused:

 

Remember that you need to get your notation right.

 

[math] y = mx^n + b[/math] implies that [math]\tfrac{dy}{dx} = mnx^{n-1}[/math], but it certainly does not imply that [math]y = mnx^{n-1}[/math].

Posted

Yes indeed, the notation is rather sloppy. It would be better to write y(X), y'(X) and Y(X) for example (and indicating the domain and range of these functions !)

 

Mandrake

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

for y=mx +b couldn't you take a derivative of it and get y'=m+b this being a constant number it would just tell you that the rate of change is zero

 

right?

 

( also shouldn't you never see y=mx^n +b as y=mx+b is a way of writing a linear equation (slope intercept form))

Posted
for y=mx +b couldn't you take a derivative of it and get y'=m+b this being a constant number it would just tell you that the rate of change is zero

 

right?

 

db/dx = 0.

Posted

wups yeah your right it would be y'=m

 

but the rest of my statement would be right correct?

 

edit**

I was not trying to say that y'=0 but rather the change in the expression is zero.

Posted

sorry just my bad wording. the way I learned derivatives was that they represented the rate of change in an expression. its just my way of thinking about it.

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