electronicsgeek
10+ year member
CarAudio.com Elite
whats the diffrence between ln(x^2) and lnx^2? Say we try to take the derivitive. How would it matter?
yes but how would that show a diffrence in numerical value, if you took the derivitive of it?Graph them; you get extremely different graphs //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
uhhhhhhThey have different domains and ranges...for example, you have a limit @ X=0 for [ln(x)]^2, while you have negative values for X for the other one.
Don't know if that helps or not.
I believe they're both derived using the chain rule, but I'm not really an expert on this by any means, I'm barely passing my calc class as it is //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/biggrin.gif.d71a5d36fcbab170f2364c9f2e3946cb.gif
care to answere what the derivative of both of those are? or better yet tan(x^2) andd tanx^2?ln(x^2) and lnx^2 are very diff statements, therefore, the derivitive does matter...
haah...its actually not my hw. im studying for a calc1 test tom. iv been confused with this basic rule how to simplfiy this function.cant do your own homework?