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hi,
i'm a bit stuck here. i was just experimenting with complex number derivatives and i don't know what to do now.
we know that:
we can observe through calculation that:
can we extend this to complex numbers? lets try:
we haven't done any calculations for this one so we'll do this below:
simplifying:
but we know that the FIRST derivative of x is just 1, so:
but this implies that:
so where to go from here? how do i show that:
?
please help, i'm very stuck. thanks!
Hi magic_box ;
Since x is a variable, is it not. What could the denominator possibly equal that would make that expression equal to 1. It would have to equal x, but x is a variable not a fixed constant.
In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.
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hello,
thanks for your reply..
yes, i was thinking this too...x is not a fixed constant and is a variable, so this is where i got stuck.
so, assuming that i just had
as my first derivative, is there any way to simplify this further?
i mean, i'm just trying to see how you can arrive at the first derivative of x by using;
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