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First Year Mathematics A (Differentiation & Linear Algebra) (4 Viewers)

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Can someone do this via l'hopital's rule? Answer is 3, which I'm not getting for some odd reason.

lim x -> 1 (2x^4-3x^3+x)/((x-1)^2)
 

turntaker

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Can someone do this via l'hopital's rule? Answer is 3, which I'm not getting for some odd reason.

lim x -> 1 (2x^4-3x^3+x)/((x-1)^2)
Did you keep re applying the rule
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Can someone also do this question, I'm not getting the right answer.

Differentiate x + ln(x) = y + 2ln(y)


I keep getting 1 + 1/x - 2/y
 

iforgotmyname

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Can someone also do this question, I'm not getting the right answer.

Differentiate x + ln(x) = y + 2ln(y)


I keep getting 1 + 1/x - 2/y
You forgot about the chain rule at the end. And f'x of y is dy/dx
 

parad0xica

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Uhhhh not sure. It's implicit differentiation sorry. It's part of a equation of a line tangent question.
To demonstrate iforgotmyname's comment:



Differentiate all terms with respect to x,





 
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Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Why can't I used chain rule to differentiate sqrt(x-1), e.g. (x-1)^1/2... y'= 1/2(x-1)*1

Instead the answers use the definition of a derivative to solve and get a different answer. Am I doing something wrong above^?
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

Why can't I used chain rule to differentiate sqrt(x-1), e.g. (x-1)^1/2... y'= 1/2(x-1)*1

Instead the answers use the definition of a derivative to solve and get a different answer. Am I doing something wrong above^?
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

So you get different derivatives using normal methods vs the definition?

The question is a Mean Value Theorem question, with that function on an interval.
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

So you get different derivatives using normal methods vs the definition?

The question is a Mean Value Theorem question, with that function on an interval.
We should get the same answer.

I can't see the specific Q., but if it's that function over an interval (assuming it's well-defined there, i.e. x > 1 there), then the derivative should be what I posted.
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

We should get the same answer.

I can't see the specific Q., but if it's that function over an interval (assuming it's well-defined there, i.e. x > 1 there), then the derivative should be what I posted.
It is, but what I'm I doing incorrect? Or how are you getting that derivative?
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread



How do I solve this with MAPLE?
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

How do I do this in MAPLE?



I understand you use sum(); but what do you do with the n^5/2 on the left??
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1131 help thread

How do I solve this in MAPLE?



My incorrect attempt was to go... s:= [solve(expression)] then allvalues(s[1]); to find first root... same for all other roots, then evalf(result, 10); on each root.

Anyone know the steps to the correct way to get right answers?
 

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