Indefinite Integrals basic examples - Calculus
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@tacos830 wanna cookie?
All Comments (57)
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@antizero100 its important you understand the concept of dx if your in calculus because you will soon get into related rates which will require you to be able to use chain rule in different ways also it helps when using U SUBstitution
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I love south florida! I wish I lived there.
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you're grea and what's greater is you're doing this for free!
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Thank you so much for your tutoring! What my teacher was trying to explain to us for an hour in our last lecture you explained it in 8 minutes and 35 seconds, and I could understand yours very clearly. Thank you so much
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Wait, what's the point of the dx? What's it suppose to do?
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OK, why can't i see this video.
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Nice video bro, if only i had the same kind of technology as you do, XD, all i can do is silent tutorials in my videos, nonetheless any practice is most of the times good practice, i hope my videos can be as good as yours
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dude, you are awesome! i'm a physics major and i'd like to know where were you last spring!? i'm retaking calculus I and II because I couldn't comprehend but like 60% of the material, and I needed the other 40% which is what's used in my major classes. =)
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Is it not customary to leave your answer in the same state as the question asked? So instead of 14x^3/2 over 3 you should have Sqroot(14x^3) over 3?
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With the last example, how come you only add C to the end, instead of in each of the parts?
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@annakasabian C is an arbitrary constant...remember an integral by definition is a function whose DERIVATE is equal to the integrand (what you're integrating) and since the derivative of any constant is 0, it is permissible to denote a constant with a +C term at the end.
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What is 'C' in this case?
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good video, but you need to stop saying um, ah, uh. makes you sound unsure
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is your tutoring free??
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@BryceFritzel typically when you have x^(3/2) its simplified as x times the square root of x
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ur videos are good, but ur introductions are always really very long indeed :)
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At 6:27, couldn't/shouldn't you simplify the x^(3/2) as the square root of x^3?
nice one.. but does it has to be + C and Not - C?
pepteamsergi09 9 months ago
@pepteamsergi09 It could be +C or -C . It is a constant which could be positive or negative. However it is just standard to put +C
MathMeeting 9 months ago 3
What up internet? haha i love it. Thank you for this video it was really well done and you weren't kidding about the ease of comprehension of your explanations of math. Thanks again and awesome video
xxxxsharpie 10 months ago 5
@xxxxsharpie The compliment is much appreciated.
MathMeeting 10 months ago
Nice video, it really helped me get back on the right track. Do you have any videos of how to integrate definite integrals?
jamin870 10 months ago
@jamin870 I just posted a video on definite integrals. Check it out :)
MathMeeting 10 months ago