mathnoobie
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In a video I was watching regarding how to solve these, the lecturer said that
the form of a Bernoulli Differential Equation is y'+P(x)y=q(x)y^n
where n>1
This means that if n = 1, it wouldn't be a Bernoulli differential equation and would be a first order linear differential equation, but if n=1, y'+P(x)y=q(x)y doesn't take the form of y'+P(x)y=q(x), so how is this a first order linear differential equation?
, here is the video in case anyone wants to check it out.
the form of a Bernoulli Differential Equation is y'+P(x)y=q(x)y^n
where n>1
This means that if n = 1, it wouldn't be a Bernoulli differential equation and would be a first order linear differential equation, but if n=1, y'+P(x)y=q(x)y doesn't take the form of y'+P(x)y=q(x), so how is this a first order linear differential equation?
, here is the video in case anyone wants to check it out.
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