I recently took an exam, and one of the questions I got wrong was:
The slope of the secant line to the graph of g(x) between x=5 and x=5+h is 10 - 6h + 2h^2. What is the slope of the tangent line at x=5?
I did the 4 step process for the definition of a derivative. He told me its easier than that when I tried to show him the work. I keep looking at this and I cant understand how to do it. He said I need to think about the definition of a derivative and relationship between a secant and tangent line. So since the full 4 step process was unecessary for this kind of problem, I've since tried taking the limit of g(x) approaching 0 and I've tried it approaching 5. I've now gotten the answer of 6 but I have no idea how I can check this, and quite frankly I need some help for this kind of question coming up at the end semester finals.
Any help is very much appreciate!
The slope of the secant line to the graph of g(x) between x=5 and x=5+h is 10 - 6h + 2h^2. What is the slope of the tangent line at x=5?
I did the 4 step process for the definition of a derivative. He told me its easier than that when I tried to show him the work. I keep looking at this and I cant understand how to do it. He said I need to think about the definition of a derivative and relationship between a secant and tangent line. So since the full 4 step process was unecessary for this kind of problem, I've since tried taking the limit of g(x) approaching 0 and I've tried it approaching 5. I've now gotten the answer of 6 but I have no idea how I can check this, and quite frankly I need some help for this kind of question coming up at the end semester finals.
Any help is very much appreciate!