ilikesoldat said:
But by your method then they WOULD differ and wouldn't be equal, if they differed by a constant...? Also, technically didn't I show that C1=-C2 and C2=-C1? Because ln (1) = C1+C2, so then 0=C1+C2, and then C1=-C2 or -C1=C2
Yes, they would be different. Note that the problem didn't ask you to show that the two expressions were equal but that they were equivalent.
Also, taking the derivative of each would give 0 and 0, since ln of anything is a constant, and a derivative of that is 0...?
No, that wouldn't make any sense...using a basic differentiation formula: if derivative of tan x = sec^2x that already makes no sense... shouldn't derivative of tan x just be 0 then? Haha now I'm even more confused than I was before.
I'm not sure where you got the idea that the log of anything is a constant. Eradicate that misconception from your mind.
Sorry guys I'm only in high school, I need a little more explanation than that. If not I can sit on it for a while but I don't feel enlightened at all.. for now.. but I'll think about it some more
In the simplest form of a proof, you start with your given assumptions, follow logically correct reasoning, and end up with what you were trying to show.
To save some typing, I'm going to let F(x)=ln |sec x + tan x|+c
1 and G(x)=-ln|sec x - tan x|+c
2. You want to show that F(x) and G(x) are equivalent, in other words, that F(x)-G(x) is a constant. You can start with
F(x)-G(x) = (ln |sec x + tan x|+c
1) - (-ln|sec x - tan x|+c
2),
which is obviously true, and then do some algebra on the righthand side to simplify it and eventually end up with
F(x)-G(x) = c
1-c
2
which is what you wanted to show. So you started with a true statement and showed that what you wanted to prove was a logical consequence.
What you generally don't want to do is something like this: Start with
F(x)-G(x) = k
This is what you're trying to prove, so you don't really know beforehand if it's valid to say it's equal to a constant k. That's the first problem. Then you do some work and end up with
c
1-c
2 = k
and conclude, "This is true; therefore, what I started with must be true." This is the second problem. That argument isn't logically correct. It is possible to start with a false premise and end up with a true conclusion.
One caveat is that this form
will work if all of the steps are reversible. In that case, you can logically go from c
1-c
2 = k back to F(x)-G(x) = k. This is what they did in the solution you found via Google. Note that every step is separated by <-->. Those aren't there by accident. The proof writer is explicitly saying that the steps work both ways.
Oh also I googled the question and someone answered it like this, which is part of what I based my answer on :
Equivalent if and only if
ln I sec x + tan x I = - ln I sec x - tan x I + K <-->
ln I sec x + tan x I + ln I sec x - tan x I = K <-->
ln[ I sec x + tan x I ·I sec x - tan x I] = K <-->
ln[ | sec²x - tan²x|]= K <-->
ln[| 1+tan²x-tan²x|] = K <-->
ln1= cte But ln1=0= --> It's true -->
They are formulas equivalent.
Also can I ask how you are able to type with that clear mathematical font? is it some program or something?
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=546968