Going through solution and stuck on a step

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The discussion revolves around a homework problem involving trigonometric identities. A user is confused about how to transition from one equation to another in a solution provided by a professor. The clarification provided explains that the professor divided the numerator and denominator of each fraction by specific trigonometric terms. This manipulation leads to a clearer expression of the fractions in terms of tangent functions. The user expresses gratitude after understanding the explanation.
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I am going through a given solution to a homework problem and have come to this statement

sina cosb/(sina cosb + cosa sinb) - cosa sinb/(sina cosb - cosa sinb)
= 1/(1 + tanb/tana) - 1/(1 + tana/tanb)

I have looked over every trig identity that I could find but cannot figure out how the Prof. got the second line from the first.

Thanks
 
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ridemx said:
I am going through a given solution to a homework problem and have come to this statement

sina cosb/(sina cosb + cosa sinb) - cosa sinb/(sina cosb - cosa sinb)
= 1/(1 + tanb/tana) - 1/(1 + tana/tanb)

I have looked over every trig identity that I could find but cannot figure out how the Prof. got the second line from the first.

Thanks

Looks like he divided numerator & denominator in the 1st fraction by sin a cos b, and he divided numerator & denominator in the 2nd fraction by cos a sin b.

For the 1st fraction:
\frac{\sin a \cos b}{\sin a \cos b + \cos a \sin b}
\begin{aligned}<br /> =&amp; \frac{\sin a \cos b}{\sin a \cos b + \cos a \sin b} \cdot \frac{\tfrac{1}{\sin a \cos b}}{\tfrac{1}{\sin a \cos b}}\\<br /> =&amp; \frac{1}{1 + \tfrac{\cos a \sin b}{\sin a \cos b}}<br /> \end{aligned}

Can you figure it out from here?
 
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yep, that's it, just couldn't figure that out for some reason. Thanks a ton!
 
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