If that was the case, it'd be a lot easier to do that than memorise the integral of arcsin x.the-1-n-only-me said:last time i heard 3u people didnt have to integrate inverse trig.
but if you're talking about area under a inverse trig curve. just convert it normal trig and change the limits.
After doing the question a few times it just stuck in my head.JasonNg1025 said:and oh wow you actually remembered it?
OOOOHHHHHH YEAH!!...i remember using this way to do it b4...Chinmoku03 said:IIRC, an inverse sine curve is just a sine curve about the y axis, so you can use the V = pi x Sx2dy, where S is the integration symbol, cos I dunno where to find one >.>;