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Product rule(help)


stopandthink

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I'm reading the intro to calculus on the forum and i'm confused...

Basically it states [math]f(x) = (x - 2)(x + 4)[/math]

 

and to find it's derivative you basically have to add the product rule formula, but

i got completely lost at the last step,which is is where i need help at, and by the way would it not have been easier just multiplying the function

at the very start... I mean i see that in the last step all that was done was just flipping it and then multiplying..

Edited by stopandthink
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Could you be more specific? What happens in the last step that confuses you?

Of course.

I got everything up to this point

[math]1 \cdot (x + 4) + 1 \cdot (x - 2) = (x + 4) + (x - 2) = 2x + 2[/math]

1*(x+4)+1*(x-2)

Where in the formula does it say to multiply by a one.

It would indeed be easier at the start to multiply things out, but often times you can't do that -- what if [math]f(x) = x\sin x[/math] or [math]f(x) = x e^x[/math]?

I'm not that far into calculus to understand these type of functions yet, but i will.

 

-------

 

it basically left me hanging after

"And since we can find the derivative of things like (x - 2"

after that im lost

Edited by stopandthink
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I didn't know you could apply [math]\frac{d}{dx} ax^n = anx^{n - 1}[/math]

To [math](x-2)[/math] or [math](x+4)[/math]

 

______

Like this

(x-2)^1 = 1*(x-2)

is that what you did?

 

 

I think you could apply this rule, you are applying it wrong though here. Here is how I would apply this rule to the situation.

 

the derivative of ( x - 2 ) ^ 1 = ( 1 ) ( ( x - 2 ) ^ 0 ) ( d/dx ( x - 2 ) ) = ( 1 ) ( 1 ) ( 1 ) = 1

 

It makes the process longer in this situation but it is correct.

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