- #1
Vodkacannon
- 40
- 0
I'm just a high school senior who noticed that the derivative has a general formula that we all know is,
[itex]\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}[/itex]
but that there is no general formula (at least I haven't heard of it yet) for the integral of a function.
I know I cannot simply just take the inverse of the difference quotient.
Is it impossible to generalize a formula for the integral?
[itex]\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}[/itex]
but that there is no general formula (at least I haven't heard of it yet) for the integral of a function.
I know I cannot simply just take the inverse of the difference quotient.
Is it impossible to generalize a formula for the integral?