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I'm in the middle of a question, and something that's probably basic has stumped me.

I need to find the antiderivative of (u^2) / du.

I've never seen the 'du' in the denominator before. How do I deal with that?

2007-03-12 20:19:29 · 2 answers · asked by jsprplc2006 4 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

2 answers

If you're in the middle of the question, it might be helpful to see how you go to this point. Is (u^2)/du set equal to something else? You may be able to rewrite the equation in a form that allows you to take the antiderivative of both sides to get a meaningful expression, or your current situation might be the result of a mistake in your work. You cannot integrate an expression with du in the denominator, or an expression that lacks du. The only thing you can integrate is an expression where du is a factor.

2007-03-12 20:25:03 · answer #1 · answered by DavidK93 7 · 0 0

agree with david whats the original problem

2007-03-13 03:28:25 · answer #2 · answered by eeeek 1 · 0 2

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