Troubleshooting a Formula for Solving Sides and Angles: Help Needed!"

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The discussion centers on developing a formula for solving sides and angles in trigonometry, with a focus on a specific equation involving logarithms and trigonometric functions. The user presents a series of transformations leading to an expression for x, ultimately calculating it as approximately 21.3 degrees. However, a participant points out an error in the manipulation of the equation, specifically regarding the division by cos(x), which alters the validity of the steps taken. The user acknowledges this mistake as a typo, indicating a need for careful handling of trigonometric identities in their calculations. The conversation highlights the importance of accuracy in mathematical problem-solving and the potential pitfalls of algebraic manipulation.
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I've been trying to invent a formula for solving certain sides and angels on objects... and I've tried many different ways to get the formula for it, I think I might have it, but there's this one line I can't figure out how to solve... help would be appreciated.

-4 ln | (csc53 + cot53) = -3 ln | (cscx + cot x)

-2.78 = -3 ln | (cscx + cot x)

-2.78 / 3 = -ln ( (1/sinx) + (1/tanx))

then... how can I get x from that...
 
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Well, this is how I'd do it.

e^(2.78/3)=1/sinx+cosx/sinx.

Asinx=1+cosx, where A is the constant on the LHS.

Asinx-cosx=1. Then just use a computer to solve this?
 
Well, remove the minus signs, and get:
\ln(\frac{1+\cos(x)}{\sin(x)})=\frac{2.78}{3}
whereby:
\frac{1+\cos(x)}{\sin(x)}=e^{\frac{2.78}{3}}
Agreed so far?
 
then is not 1+cos an identity of something? hmm
 
Last edited:
telll me if this was an illigal move...

1+cos(x) = 2.526 / sin (x)

1 = 2.526 tan(x)

1/2.526 = tan(x)

x = 21.3 degrees
 
Dr Game said:
telll me if this was an illigal move...

1+cos(x) = 2.526 / sin (x)

1 = 2.526 tan(x)

1/2.526 = tan(x)

x = 21.3 degrees

I presume your first line was meant to read 1+cosx=2.526 sinx (typo?)

However, yes that is an "illegal move". You have divided both sides by cosx, but have missed off the term 1/cosx from the LHS
 
ya, that was a typo.. and I realized that after I submited that:mad:
 

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