Antiderivative definition Recently, I was trying to derive the antiderivative of 1 x

Gybrisysmemiau7

Gybrisysmemiau7

Answered question

2022-06-13

Antiderivative definition
Recently, I was trying to derive the antiderivative of 1 x by taking lim p 1 x p but quickly realized that it would not work as it gives x 0 0 however, if I instead took lim p 1 a x x p .
This gives lim p 1 x p + 1 a p + 1 p + 1
Which evaluated with L'Hopital's rule returned ln ( x ) ln ( a ) where ln(a) is just some constant and returns the expected result.
This leads me to ask, is the antiderivative defined as a definite integral with variable upper bound, or is there something else I'm not understanding here? I looked at the fundamental theorem of calculus, for hints and this seems to be the case, but there was nothing definitive that said this was true.

Answer & Explanation

Nola Rivera

Nola Rivera

Beginner2022-06-14Added 21 answers

Step 1
1 x d x = ln | x | + C if this is true, then:
1 x = d d x [ ln | x | ]
Step 2
Let y = ln ( x )
then e y = x
e y d y d x = 1
d y d x = 1 e y = 1 x

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