This video is very helpful. I am trying to get back into school to get my undergrad in mathematics and have completed up to MTH 252 (Calculus II) at Portland Community College in Portland, Oregon. Being that I have not been in school for a while for personal reasons, I am doing example problems to make sure I do not forget how to do my Calculus I & II. Thanks.
but if theres a maximum/minimum point in the graph then in the graph of the function's derivative, that point should be y=0! but its not shown in this graph? why ?
The derivative of 3x^1 is 3. Using the power rule, multiply the exponent by the coefficient and then subtract 1 from whatever the exponent is equal to. So that would be equal to 3x^0, which is 3.
Thank you. This is so helpful. I agree. I like the small hint, and chance to pause and solve ourselves.
This video is very helpful. I am trying to get back into school to get my undergrad in mathematics and have completed up to MTH 252 (Calculus II) at Portland Community College in Portland, Oregon. Being that I have not been in school for a while for personal reasons, I am doing example problems to make sure I do not forget how to do my Calculus I & II. Thanks.
I agree
Thank you so much! Electric Engineerig Student Bagé-Brazil!
Such a good video I finally understand and can recognize chain rule in trig functions now!
this video every student should watch to get a deeper understanding of derivatives of trig ratios
Thank u so much...now all my doubts and confusions are gone...
love ur accent nd ur style
A clear explanation from the subject
this really really helped me!!!
Literally in calc 2 and forgetton all my calc 1 from online I had a year ago.
Thanks
This was a great review. Nice job!
Great vedioe
thanks you so much ❤❤❤❤❤
Amazing vid thanks so much it helped a lot
Welcome back. 😁
helped my dumbass quite a bit, I appreciate you
my university teacher keeps saying tanx derivative is cotx, he is too reluctant to listen.
Thank you so much! This really helped me.
So so so helpful
شكراً 😭❤️
helpful video ! thumbs up !
but if theres a maximum/minimum point in the graph then in the graph of the function's derivative, that point should be y=0!
but its not shown in this graph? why ?
at 10:36, would be better to use d/dx tan x = sec^2 x as simplified answer
That is what I did.
thank u
At 5:38 i thought the derivative of any constant is 0 so why doesn't the three go to zero in this situation?
The derivative of 3x^1 is 3. Using the power rule, multiply the exponent by the coefficient and then subtract 1 from whatever the exponent is equal to. So that would be equal to 3x^0, which is 3.
In fact, if you're talking about the first case, you can apply the product rule ( f'*g + f*g') and you'll have 0*cos(x) + 3 -sin(x) = f'(x)= -3sin(x).
THank you loads :D
u sounded like a robot for a sec.
like it
this is nice
thanks but was too fast