I used to do that during that during HSC but there was something somewhere that a teacher said you can't do that cause technically it's wrong.Remember the chain rule in differentiation:
Therefore we can say that:
Here f(x) = x9 giving f'(x) = 9x8 and g(x) = x4-1 giving g'(x) = 4x3
Yeah fair enough heyThere is nothing technically wrong with that. It's a method even encouraged in first year uni integration, not to mention quicker if you're good at recognising the form...If anything your substitution has a small technical issue because you have x's and u's in the same integrand when you're not supposed to...lol
Also, I forgot to mention that since 2 unit students do not learn integration by substitution, they are expected to know how to use the reverse chain rule instead lol
LOL this is hard? It's simple integration by substitution.Hmmm Intergration by substitution is a 3 unit topic??
You shouldn't get any intergration questions this hard in the HSC, cause really you shouldn't have learned how to do them?
Ah, I thought this was the 3U forum. Sorry.^ the point is, in 2 unit you apparently don't do substitution at all
No it's not hard, it's just not part of their syllabus?LOL this is hard? It's simple integration by substitution.