Conventions for antiderivatives notation. Am I setting myself up for a fundamental misconception if

skynugurq7

skynugurq7

Answered question

2022-07-01

Conventions for antiderivatives notation.
Am I setting myself up for a fundamental misconception if I consider antidifferentiation denoted by sign as the operation that is the inverse of the differential of a function denoted by d and that also returns an arbitrary constant C? To make things clear suppose I have a function F where d d x F ( x ) = f ( x ) for all x in some interval. Then it follows d F ( x ) = f ( x ) d x now if I have ( d F ( x ) ) = F ( x ) + C from my definition of antiderivative operation denoted by then it also means f ( x ) d x = F ( x ) + C. What do you guys think?

Answer & Explanation

Rafael Dillon

Rafael Dillon

Beginner2022-07-02Added 15 answers

Step 1
For a given (differentiable) function, there is another single function which is its derivative.
In the other direction we are not quite so lucky: if a function is integrable there is not a single function whose derivative is the original function, but a family of functions. Each member of the family corresponds to a particular choice of constant C.
Step 2
So, when we say "the indefinite integral of f" and write " f     d x " we are referring to the entire family at once. The notation " F ( x ) + C" is shorthand for { F ( x ) + C C R }.
If an initial condition is given, then it is possible to isolate exactly which member of the family you are looking for.

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