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I was working on a physics question, when I came up with something that had this in it:

1/dx

I don't remember how to integrate, and it looks to me to be wrong. It's been a while since I've integrated, and I'm not even sure this is possible. If so, what would the answer be when integrating?

2007-02-06 03:06:18 · 3 answers · asked by Nick K 1 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

3 answers

I think integration takes place on a command like this

∫(something) dx

and in this case dx is in denominator and for this you can't integrate this.

2007-02-06 03:29:27 · answer #1 · answered by Cool Sun 3 · 0 0

Could you post the entire integral? What you have
doesn't make sense here, sorry!

2007-02-06 11:12:25 · answer #2 · answered by steiner1745 7 · 0 0

mayb u remember it out of context
it can b sumthing like
1/dx=6x/ydy
dy/dx=6x/y
S y dy=S 6x dx

2007-02-06 11:13:14 · answer #3 · answered by Maths Rocks 4 · 0 0

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