A proof I'm reading says that when we have
Geometric sum = x
we can take the derivative of both sides of the equation, and they'll still be equal:
derivative(geometric sum) = derivative(x)
Why does this work? I've tried searching for it but haven't found a link to a good explanation. (Incidentally, if anyone can recommend a good calculus primer for understanding proofs in probability and statistics, that would be fantastic....)
Is it because it's a convergent infinite series, or is it something special about the geometric sum?
EDIT:
I've found a Proofwiki stub for this but it doesn't yet have a proof or explanation, just states the theorem.
https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Derivati...ries_of_Continuously_Differentiable_Functions
Geometric sum = x
we can take the derivative of both sides of the equation, and they'll still be equal:
derivative(geometric sum) = derivative(x)
Why does this work? I've tried searching for it but haven't found a link to a good explanation. (Incidentally, if anyone can recommend a good calculus primer for understanding proofs in probability and statistics, that would be fantastic....)
Is it because it's a convergent infinite series, or is it something special about the geometric sum?
EDIT:
I've found a Proofwiki stub for this but it doesn't yet have a proof or explanation, just states the theorem.
https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Derivati...ries_of_Continuously_Differentiable_Functions
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