What Does the Big F Represent in Equations?

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What does the big F stand for in equations like

f(x)-sinb=F(a)-F(b) ??

It's not like the little f in function.
 
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Typically, textbooks discussing the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
refer to F(x) ("big F") as the antiderivative of f(x) ("little f").

*This link might help :smile:
 
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"f(x)-sinb=F(a)-F(b)" makes no sense. Are you sure it wasn't something like \int_b^a f(x)dx= F(a)- F(b)?
 
SO a capital F means the antiderivative of a function?
 
By convention, if we use a lower-case letter to denote a function, we use an upper-case letter to denote its anti-derivative.

It's not something you have to do -- it's just something that people usually do because everyone else does it and it's convenient.
 
according to some bumper stickers i have seen, it stands for the president.
 
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With "_ _ _" after it?
 
I've seen this used as follows
f(x)=x^2
g(x)=x/2
F(x)=f(x)/(g(x)

Other than that, doesn't ring a bell.

EDIT: What math class did you see this in?
 
Did you mean to type anything else? I didn't see a closed parenthesis. If it is indeed so, then the F(x) you saw does not refer to any antiderivative, but simply f(x) / g(x). As Hurkyl said below, the antiderivative notation is simply convention, and not a strict rule of mathematics.
 
  • #10
moose said:
I've seen this used as follows
f(x)=x^2
g(x)=x/2
F(x)=f(x)/g(x)

Other than that, doesn't ring a bell.

EDIT: What math class did you see this in?

That is simply defining F(x) to be f(x)/g(x)- making it clear that the convention "F(x) is an anti-derivative of f(x)" is not being used!
 
  • #11
Actually, I hereby declare that the following definition of F(x) is unique and unviolable:
F(x)=\frac{\pi}{1+\frac{\pi}{1+\frac{x}{e+\pi}}}
 
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