Differentiation formula: Is this a typo?

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maistral
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TL;DR
Resource found in the 'net, trying to know if this is a typo or not.
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The notes initially say that the error term is positive. After substitution of A and C which are clearly positive, the term suddenly became negative...? Is this a typo, or is there a theory behind this?
 
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It seems OK observing that the third term of (5.14) is f”(x).
 
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anuttarasammyak said:
It seems OK observing that the third term of (5.14) is f”(x).
What does this imply? That either positive or negative will work?
 
maistral said:
Summary:: Resource found in the 'net, trying to know if this is a typo or not.

Red arrows.
View attachment 287254

The notes initially say that the error term is positive. After substitution of A and C which are clearly positive, the term suddenly became negative...? Is this a typo, or is there a theory behind this?
It would seem to be the formula for an estimate of the error term in the Taylor series. Is this what your question was?
 
forlmula(5.14).jpg


Transfer the second term of RHS to LHS.
 
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I finally got it! The notation was so confusing, sorry.

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