c.teixeira
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Hi there!
If one would want to prove that the indefined integral :
\int[f(x)+g(x)]dx = \int f(x)dx + \int g(x)dx.
Would this be apropriate:
A(x) = \int[f(x)+g(x)]dx;
B(x) = \int f(x)dx;
C(x) = \int g(x)dx.
And since the primitive of a fuction is another fuction whose derivative is the original fuction:
A'(x) = f(x) + g(x);
B'(x) + C'(x) = (B + C)'(x) = f(x) + g(x).
What would imply bt the Mean Value Theorem: A(x) = B(x) + C(x) + K.
Is this a approiate proof?
If so, who do we know that k = 0? Since there is no K in " \int[f(x)+g(x)]dx = \int f(x)dx + \int g(x)dx."
Regards,
If one would want to prove that the indefined integral :
\int[f(x)+g(x)]dx = \int f(x)dx + \int g(x)dx.
Would this be apropriate:
A(x) = \int[f(x)+g(x)]dx;
B(x) = \int f(x)dx;
C(x) = \int g(x)dx.
And since the primitive of a fuction is another fuction whose derivative is the original fuction:
A'(x) = f(x) + g(x);
B'(x) + C'(x) = (B + C)'(x) = f(x) + g(x).
What would imply bt the Mean Value Theorem: A(x) = B(x) + C(x) + K.
Is this a approiate proof?
If so, who do we know that k = 0? Since there is no K in " \int[f(x)+g(x)]dx = \int f(x)dx + \int g(x)dx."
Regards,