Rules of Differentiation of Functions in Calculus
Rules of Differentiation of Functions in Calculus
Calculus
The basic rules of Differentiation of functions in calculus are presented along with
several examples.
let g(x) =
differentiation
rules of
Unless otherwise stated, all functions will be functions from R to R, although more generally, the
formulae below make sense wherever they are well defined.
Differentiation is linear
Main article: Linearity of differentiation
In other words, the derivative of the function h(x) = a f(x) + b g(x) with respect to x
In other words, the derivative of the function h(x) = f (g(x)) with respect to x is
In Leibniz's notation this is written (suggestively) as:
This should not be confused with the reciprocal rule: the reciprocal 1/x of a nonzero real number x is its
inverse with respect to multiplication, whereas the inverse of a function is its inverse with respect to
function composition.
If the function f has an inverse g = f1 (so that g (f(x)) = x and f (g(y)) = y) then
This can be derived from reciprocal rule and the product rule. Conversely (using the constant rule) the
reciprocal rule is the special case f(x) = 1.
Logarithmic derivatives
The logarithmic derivative is another way of stating the rule for differentiating the logarithm of a function
(using the chain rule):
Wherever f is positive.
See also
Mathematics reference
Rules for differentiation
Essential rules for differentiation.
Legend.
Operator.
Basic.
(d/dx) (a u) = a du/dx
equation 1
equation 2
equation 3
equation 4
(d/dx) a = 0
equation 5
(d/dx) x = 1
equation 6
(d/dx) xn = n xn - 1
equation 7
equation 8
equation 9
(d/dx) ex = ex
equation 10
(d/dx) ln x = 1/x
equation 11
Trigonometry.
(d/dx) sin x = cos x
(d/dx) cos x = -sin x
equation 12
Rules of Differentiation
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