UsafaMufasa
New member
- Joined
- May 31, 2015
- Messages
- 2
I am self-learning hyperbolic functions and the problem states to find f'(x) if
f(x) = xsinh-1(1/x)
Here is my work:
f'(x) = sinh-1(1/x) + (-x)/[(x2)(1+1/x2)1/2]
I simplified it to:
f'(x) = sinh-1(1/x) - 1/(x2+1)1/2
However, the answer the book gives is:
f'(x) = sinh-1(1/x) - |x|/[x(x2+1)1/2]
I am not understanding where the absolute value is coming from. Any help is appreciated.
btw... this is my first post so if I did something incorrectly please let me know:shock:
f(x) = xsinh-1(1/x)
Here is my work:
f'(x) = sinh-1(1/x) + (-x)/[(x2)(1+1/x2)1/2]
I simplified it to:
f'(x) = sinh-1(1/x) - 1/(x2+1)1/2
However, the answer the book gives is:
f'(x) = sinh-1(1/x) - |x|/[x(x2+1)1/2]
I am not understanding where the absolute value is coming from. Any help is appreciated.
btw... this is my first post so if I did something incorrectly please let me know:shock: