The question I am working on states "Use a substitution to evaluate the following indefinite integrals". This should be u-substitution, since that is our most recent unit.

I understand that I should probably set the denominator to my u. let u = cot(x) - pi . then du/dx = -csc^2(x).
What comes after? My thought is to take the integral of (csc(x)/u)^2, which results in 1/3(csc(x)/cot(x) - pi) ^ 3. This doesn't seem right, as that completely ignores the du/dx calculated in the first step.
I'm not sure what the right approach is in this case.

I understand that I should probably set the denominator to my u. let u = cot(x) - pi . then du/dx = -csc^2(x).
What comes after? My thought is to take the integral of (csc(x)/u)^2, which results in 1/3(csc(x)/cot(x) - pi) ^ 3. This doesn't seem right, as that completely ignores the du/dx calculated in the first step.
I'm not sure what the right approach is in this case.