we now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. of...

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We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not so simple. What is needed is a way to combine derivative rules to evaluate more complicated functions.

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Page 1: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions.

Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not so simple. What is needed is a way to combine derivative rules to evaluate more complicated functions.

Page 2: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Consider a simple composite function:

Page 3: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

and another:

Page 4: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

and one more:

This pattern is called the chain rule.

Page 5: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Chain Rule:

If is the composite of and , then:

example: Find:

Page 6: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

We could also do it this way:

Page 7: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Here is a faster way to find the derivative:

Differentiate the outside function...

…then the inside function

Page 8: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Another example:

derivative of theoutside function

derivative of theinside function

It looks like we need to use the chain rule again!

Page 9: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Another example:

The chain rule can be used more than once.

(That’s what makes the “chain” in the “chain rule”!)

Page 10: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Derivative formulas include the chain rule!

etcetera…

The formulas on the memorization sheet are written with

instead of . Don’t forget to include the term!

Page 11: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

The most common mistake on the chapter 3 test is to forget to use the chain rule.

Every derivative problem could be thought of as a chain-rule problem:

derivative of outside function

derivative of inside function

The derivative of x is one.

Page 12: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

The chain rule enables us to find the slope of parametrically defined curves:

Divide both sides byThe slope of a parametrized curve is given by:

Page 13: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

These are the equations for an ellipse.

Example:

Page 14: We now have a pretty good list of “shortcuts” to find derivatives of simple functions. Of course, many of the functions that we will encounter are not

Don’t forget to use the chain rule!

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