This document provides basic rules for differentiation and integration of common functions including:
- Constants, variables, and composite functions can be differentiated using standard formulas. Integrals of these functions use the reverse operation plus a constant term.
- Trigonometric functions like sin, cos, tan, csc, and sec have defined differentiation and integration formulas listed.
- Exponential and logarithmic functions follow standard rules for differentiating and integrating constants and variables to a power.
- Integrals that result in a term to a power involve dividing that term by the power plus a constant.
This document provides basic rules for differentiation and integration of common functions including:
- Constants, variables, and composite functions can be differentiated using standard formulas. Integrals of these functions use the reverse operation plus a constant term.
- Trigonometric functions like sin, cos, tan, csc, and sec have defined differentiation and integration formulas listed.
- Exponential and logarithmic functions follow standard rules for differentiating and integrating constants and variables to a power.
- Integrals that result in a term to a power involve dividing that term by the power plus a constant.
This document provides basic rules for differentiation and integration of common functions including:
- Constants, variables, and composite functions can be differentiated using standard formulas. Integrals of these functions use the reverse operation plus a constant term.
- Trigonometric functions like sin, cos, tan, csc, and sec have defined differentiation and integration formulas listed.
- Exponential and logarithmic functions follow standard rules for differentiating and integrating constants and variables to a power.
- Integrals that result in a term to a power involve dividing that term by the power plus a constant.
Z d [k] = 0 0 dx = C dx Z d [kx] = k k dx = kx + C dx Z Z d [kf (x)] = kf 0 (x) kf (x) dx = k f (x) dx Z Z Z d [f (x) § g (x)] = f 0 (x) § g 0 (x) [f (x) § g (x)] dx = f (x) dx § g (x) dx dx Z d n xn+1 [x ] = nxn¡1 xn dx = + C, n 6= 1 dx n+1 Z d [sin x] = cos x cos x dx = sin x + C dx Z d [cos x] = ¡ sin x sin x dx = ¡ cos x + C dx Z d [tan x] = sec2 x sec2 x dx = tan x + C dx Z d [sec x] = sec x tan x sec x tan x dx = sec x + C dx Z d [cot x] = ¡ csc2 x csc2 x dx = ¡ cot x + C dx Z d [csc x] = ¡ csc x cot x csc x cot x dx = ¡ csc x + C dx Remark 1. In the above table
k; n 2 R are constants
and f : R ! R, g : R ! R are di®erentiable and integrable functions.