rhombuster
New member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2015
- Messages
- 8
I've been given a couple questions that just aren't making sense to me.
In general, the derivative of a product is not the product of the derivatives. Find nonconstant functions f and g such that the derivative of fg equals f'g'.
I have the same question but for the quotient rule. (f/g equals f'/g')
I can't find any information on this.
I'm pretty sure that I'd have to use e^x for the product rule and ln(something) for the quotient. I can't think of any functions that would end up working like this.
I know the derivative of e^x = e^x. Can anyone help me with this. Everywhere on the net just posts proofs for this being unable to happen.
In general, the derivative of a product is not the product of the derivatives. Find nonconstant functions f and g such that the derivative of fg equals f'g'.
I have the same question but for the quotient rule. (f/g equals f'/g')
I can't find any information on this.
I'm pretty sure that I'd have to use e^x for the product rule and ln(something) for the quotient. I can't think of any functions that would end up working like this.
I know the derivative of e^x = e^x. Can anyone help me with this. Everywhere on the net just posts proofs for this being unable to happen.