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Quick question (1 Viewer)

<Stretch>

Engineered
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Could you please show me how to differentiate this with all working:

y = e xy (cosx)

Thanks in advance
 
P

pLuvia

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Ok that makes more sense

Oh you wanted working lol, ok here

well the general formula is y'=f'(x)ef(x)

.:f(x)=cosx
f'(x)=-sinx

And ecosx=ecosx

And so you get this answer

y'=-sinx*ecosx
 

<Stretch>

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Thanks for the speedy reply. Your a lifesaver. But is there any working you can show me to link the two?

Sorry working just noticed. Champion.
 
Last edited:

Riviet

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Basically you get the original function multiplied by the derivative of the function in the index.
 
P

pLuvia

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Oh I edited the post, when I read you wanting working

the general formula is y'=f'(x)ef(x), and you when you d (ef(x))/dx = ef(x)
 

Mountain.Dew

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to be REALLY general, that was merely an application of the chain rule.

y = e^cosx

so, using dy/dx = (dy/du) * (du/dx), it is:

dy/dx = [d(e^cosx)/d(cosx)] * [d(cosx) / dx]
= e^cosx*[-sinx]
=-sinx*e^cosx
 

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