alice22
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Mark44 said:Sure you can.
\int_{.4}^{.8} \frac{dt}{t} + \int_{.8}^{1} \frac{dt}{t} = \int_{.4}^{1} \frac{dt}{t}
\Rightarrow \int_{.4}^{.8} \frac{dt}{t} = \int_{.4}^{1} \frac{dt}{t} - \int_{.8}^{1} \frac{dt}{t}
= -\int_{1}^{.4} \frac{dt}{t} + \int_{1}^{.8} \frac{dt}{t}
= - ln(.4) + ln(.8) = ln(.8/.4) = ln 2 ~.693
You're quoting someone in this thread, but what is said in the quote is incorrect. For any base b, with b > 0 and b != 1, logb 1 = 0. This has nothing to do with whatever the base happens to be.
I don't understand what you're asking here. The natural exponential function ex has all real numbers as its domain and the positive reals as its range. The inverse of this function (the natural log function) has a domain of the positive reals and its range is all real numbers.
What I am saying is the exponential function does not stop at 1, however the integral of 1/x
does not seem to be defined below 1.
You seem to have ignored that bit and it was that bit I was specifically concerned with.