oh!! yeh !!i didnt notice that..Originally posted by Lazarus
McLake is right... it's a hyperbola, and it's undefined for -2 <= x <= 2.
Were the bounds for x or for u? Because u is only undefined for u < -4.
Let u = 2x+3Originally posted by sukiyaki
what if we had dx/(2x + 3)^3??
Sometimes you can intergrate equations that would normally require substitution by imagining what the intergral would look like (well, I can anyway )Originally posted by marsesbars
Hm, I remember Coroneos claiming it's possible to do substitution integrations in your head! I didn't believe him, but by practicing I could at least do the substition and the fudging of the expression in my head. I reckon if you keep practicing, integration is an easy topic (if tedious...)
easier, and much less to write. *remembers the endless t-substitutions questions*Originally posted by McLake
Sometimes you can intergrate equations that would normally require substitution by imagining what the intergral would look like (well, I can anyway )
That reminds me: learn off by heart the derivitive of tan(x/2) [for use in "t" ratio intergration]Originally posted by Weisy
easier, and much less to write. *remembers the endless t-substitutions questions*
er wHAT? wait we havin learnt dat yeh *shOOOriginally posted by McLake
That reminds me: learn off by heart the derivitive of tan(x/2) [for use in "t" ratio intergration]
I disagree with that, not all t substitutions occur with t = tan(x/2). You might want in a tougher question to do substitute, say, for t = tan (3x/4). It's much safer, in my opinion, just to rederive the thing or at least know how to.Originally posted by McLake
That reminds me: learn off by heart the derivitive of tan(x/2) [for use in "t" ratio intergration]