#Maths past paper
3 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
IMO it’s probably easier to just try differentiate both sides first without expanding anything since it’s so much less algebra
So you get 2(dy/dx +1)(x+y-2) = e^y * dy/dx
3 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
IMO it’s probably easier to just try differentiate both sides first without expanding anything since it’s so much less algebra
So you get 2(dy/dx +1)(x+y-2) = e^y * dy/dx