elementary derivative problem

sambellamy

Junior Member
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Oct 21, 2014
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Hello, I am in third-term calculus and cannot remember a simple derivative problem. I am asked to find what differentiates to:

1/(1+x)2

I rewrote this as (1+x)-2 , is this an issue? Because when I integrate this, I get

-2(1+x)-1 , or -2/(1+x). My calculator gives the same answer the book does - that d/dx -1/(1+x) = 1/(1+x)2. Can anybody help me out by explaining where the error in my thinking is?
 
Hello, I am in third-term calculus and cannot remember a simple derivative problem. I am asked to find what differentiates to:

1/(1+x)2

I rewrote this as (1+x)-2 , is this an issue? Because when I integrate this, I get

-2(1+x)-1 , or -2/(1+x). My calculator gives the same answer the book does - that d/dx -1/(1+x) = 1/(1+x)2. Can anybody help me out by explaining where the error in my thinking is?
I think you are getting confused between taking derivatives
(xn)' = n xn-1
and integrating
\(\displaystyle \int x^n dx = \frac{1}{n+1} x^{n+1}, n \ne -1\)

In your case, you have the integral and n=-2 or
\(\displaystyle \int (1+x)^{-2} dx = \frac{1}{-2+1} (1+x)^{-2+1} = - (1 + x)^{-1}\)

Edit to add: Plus, of course, that constant that gets left out every so often.
 
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