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Find, from first principles,the derivative of e^tanx​

User Rahul TS
by
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1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

[(sec^2)(x)]. [e^tan(x)]

Or

[e^(tan(x))]/[(cos^2)(x)].

Explanation:

d/dx(e^tan(x))

From the low:

[(d/du)(e^u)]=[(d/du)(u)]. [ln(e)]. [e^u]

=[(sec^2)(x)]. [e^(tan(x))]. [ln(e)]

=[(sec^2)(x)]. [e^(tan(x))]

or

[e^(tan(x))]/[(cos^2)(x)].

Because

(cos^2)(x)=1 / (sec^2)(x)

User CEich
by
6.2k points