How Do Tangent Lines Relate to Calculus Problems?

AI Thread Summary
Tangent lines are crucial in calculus as they represent the slope of a curve at a specific point. To find F(7), one must solve for y by substituting x=7 into the function F. For F'(7), the derivative must be calculated first, and then 7 is substituted into the derivative to find the slope at that point. The notation involving "d's" refers to derivatives, not differences, emphasizing that the derivative indicates the slope of the tangent line. Understanding these concepts is essential for tackling more complex calculus problems.
ACLerok
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how does tangent lines play into this problem?

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Do you understand that f(7) is the value of y when x=7?
 
yeah. i don't understand F'(7).
 
dy/dx = f'(x) is the slope of the curve y = f(x), so what is f'(7)?
 
am i supposed to plug 7 in for x and then take the derivative? how? doesn't the equation end up canceling out?
 
Why would you take the derivative?

The slope of the tangent line = the slope of the curve at the point where the line touches the curve.
 
oh, i didnt realize the d's stood for the difference.
so to find F(7), I isolate y on one side of the equation and then plugin 7 for x and solve for y? what do i do for the F'(7)? slope of the line when x=7?
 
Originally posted by ACLerok
oh, i didnt realize the d's stood for the difference.
so to find F(7), I isolate y on one side of the equation and then plugin 7 for x and solve for y? what do i do for the F'(7)? slope of the line when x=7?

These are all things that should be elementary (believe me, the problems are going to get a lot harder!).

In the first place, the "d's" do not stand for difference!
They are simply the notation for derivative. Yes, one method of finding the derivative of a function is to take the limit of the "difference quotient" but I don't think you should think "the d's stand for the difference".

In any case, the first thing you should have learned about the derivative of a function is that "the derivative IS the slope of the tangent line".

In this case, yes, solve for y. The value of y when x= 7 is the value of the function F when x= 7, F(7). The slope of that line is the derivative of F when x= 7 dF/dx(7) or F'(7).

By the way, you do not find the derivative of a function "when x= 7" by substituting 7 for x and then differntiating. The value of any function for a specific x is a number (a constant) and the derivative of a constant is always 0. Do it the other way around: first differentiate and then substitute.
 
so correct me if wrong. to find F(7), i just plug 7 for x in the equation of the tangent line and to find F'(7), I just differentiate the equation and then plug in 7 for x and solve for y?

I forget, what does differentiate mean?
 
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