Proving trigonometric identities

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on proving the trigonometric identity (1-tanθ)/(1+tanθ)=(cotθ-1)/(cotθ+1). Participants express difficulty in understanding how to manipulate the equation, with some suggesting the use of cross-multiplication and others recommending converting tan and cot functions into sine and cosine terms. It is noted that the identities provided earlier were incorrect, leading to confusion. A key suggestion is to start with the more complex side of the equation and simplify using known trigonometric identities. The conversation highlights the importance of correctly applying identities to successfully prove trigonometric equations.
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Homework Statement


Prove that:

(1-tanθ)/(1+tanθ)=(cotθ-1)/(cotθ+1)


Homework Equations



Trig Identities:

tanθ= sinθ/cosθ
cotθ= cosθ/sinθ
1+tanθ=secθ
1+cotθ=cosecθ

The Attempt at a Solution



These sorts of equations are coming up a lot and I am having trouble understanding what I have to do exactly, I have seen people cross multiply which cannot really work considering we haven't got proof that they equal each other and hence can't cross multiply. I have also attempted changing 1+tanθ to secθ and 1+cotθ to cosecθ but I am having no luck. I know there is a certain way to do it, I am just unsure of what this way is.

If possible could someone give me a guide on how to do it rather than just hint at things? I am coming up to exams in about two weeks and I don't have time to muck around, I need to make sure that I know everything that could be on the test.

Thanks in advance for your inputs!
 
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DJ-Smiles said:

Homework Statement


Prove that:

(1-tanθ)/(1+tanθ)=(cotθ-1)/(cotθ+1)

Homework Equations



Trig Identities:

tanθ= sinθ/cosθ
cotθ= cosθ/sinθ
The two below aren't identities.
DJ-Smiles said:
1+tanθ=secθ
1+cotθ=cosecθ

The Attempt at a Solution



These sorts of equations are coming up a lot and I am having trouble understanding what I have to do exactly, I have seen people cross multiply which cannot really work considering we haven't got proof that they equal each other and hence can't cross multiply. I have also attempted changing 1+tanθ to secθ and 1+cotθ to cosecθ but I am having no luck.
Which is to be expected, because the actual identies are
1+tan2θ = sec2θ and

1+cot2θ = csc2θ
DJ-Smiles said:
I know there is a certain way to do it, I am just unsure of what this way is.

If possible could someone give me a guide on how to do it rather than just hint at things? I am coming up to exams in about two weeks and I don't have time to muck around, I need to make sure that I know everything that could be on the test.

Thanks in advance for your inputs!

Start on one side (usually the side that seems most complicated, but that's subjective), and use identities to arrive at what you have on the other side.

For your problem, one approach would be to write all of the tan and cot functions in terms of sin and cos, and go from there.
 
Yeah sorry, I knew that but I was just rushing to write this down. Ok I will try that. Now say a different situation comes up say it was : (1-sinx)/(1+sinx)=(1-cosx)/(1+cos). Not sure if that is doable but something along those lines like instead of cot and tan it was cos or sin? what would i do then?
 
DJ-Smiles said:
Yeah sorry, I knew that but I was just rushing to write this down. Ok I will try that. Now say a different situation comes up say it was : (1-sinx)/(1+sinx)=(1-cosx)/(1+cos). Not sure if that is doable but something along those lines like instead of cot and tan it was cos or sin? what would i do then?
First off, you can't just make up something and try to show it's an identity. In this case, your equation is not an identity. To see that, note that if x = 0, the left side value is 1, and the right side value is 0.
 
Moving thread to the Precalc section...
 
Mark44 said:
For your problem, one approach would be to write all of the tan and cot functions in terms of sin and cos, and go from there.

Wouldn't that be much easier if you write tan as 1/cot?
 
Pranav-Arora said:
Wouldn't that be much easier if you write tan as 1/cot?

Or write cot as 1/tan. Yes, I think so.
 

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