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Calculus Cheat Sheet Part 1

This document provides formulas and concepts related to calculus and trigonometry. It includes: 1) Trigonometric formulas for sin, cos, tan, cot, sec, and csc functions and their sums and differences. 2) Formulas for differentiation of functions including products, quotients, trig functions, exponentials, logarithms, and inverse trig functions. 3) Formulas for integration including powers, exponentials, logarithms, trig functions, rational functions, and trig substitutions. 4) Concepts including limits, continuity, even and odd functions, periodic functions, and horizontal/vertical asymptotes.

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Dave Cloud
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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100% found this document useful (27 votes)
4K views4 pages

Calculus Cheat Sheet Part 1

This document provides formulas and concepts related to calculus and trigonometry. It includes: 1) Trigonometric formulas for sin, cos, tan, cot, sec, and csc functions and their sums and differences. 2) Formulas for differentiation of functions including products, quotients, trig functions, exponentials, logarithms, and inverse trig functions. 3) Formulas for integration including powers, exponentials, logarithms, trig functions, rational functions, and trig substitutions. 4) Concepts including limits, continuity, even and odd functions, periodic functions, and horizontal/vertical asymptotes.

Uploaded by

Dave Cloud
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC or read online on Scribd
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Calculus Cheat Sheet

Trigonometric Formulas
1. sin 2 θ + cos 2 θ = 1 12.
2. 1 + tan 2 θ = sec 2 θ cos 2θ = cos 2 θ − sin 2 θ = 2 cos 2 θ − 1 = 1 − 2 sin 2 θ
sin θ 1
3. 1 + cot 2 θ = csc 2 θ 13. tan θ = =
4. sin( −θ ) = − sin θ cosθ cot θ
cos(−θ ) = cosθ cosθ 1
5. 14. cot θ = =
6. tan(−θ ) = − tan θ sin θ tan θ
1
7. sin( A + B ) = sin A cos B + sin B cos A 15. secθ =
8. sin( A − B ) = sin A cos B − sin B cos A cosθ
1
9. 16. cscθ =
cos( A + B ) = cos A cos B − sin A sin B sin θ
10. π
17. cos( − θ ) = sin θ
cos( A − B) = cos A cos B + sin A sin B 2
11. sin 2θ = 2 sin θ cos θ π
18. sin( − θ ) = cos θ
2

Differentiation Formulas

d n d
1. ( x ) = nx n −1 10. (csc x ) = − csc x cot x
dx dx
d d x
2. ( fg ) = fg ′ + gf ′ 11. (e ) = e x
dx dx
d f gf ′ − fg ′ d x
3. ( )= 12. (a ) = a x ln a
dx g g2 dx
d d 1
4. f ( g ( x)) = f ′( g ( x )) g ′( x) 13. (ln x) =
dx dx x
d d 1
5. (sin x) = cos x 14. ( Arc sin x ) =
dx dx 1− x2
d d 1
6. (cos x) = − sin x 15. ( Arc tan x) =
dx dx 1+ x2
d d 1
7. (tan x ) = sec 2 x 16. ( Arc sec x) =
dx dx | x | x2 −1
d
8. (cot x ) = − csc 2 x dy dy du
dx 17. = × Chain Rule
dx dx dx
d
9. (sec x ) = sec x tan x
dx

Integration Formulas
1. ∫ a dx = ax + C
x n +1
∫ x dx = + C , n ≠ −1
n
2.
n +1
1
3. ∫ x dx = ln x + C
∫ e dx = e + C
x x
4.

ax
∫ a dx = +C
x
5.
ln a
6. ∫ ln x dx = x ln x − x + C
7. ∫ sin x dx = − cos x + C
8. ∫ cos x dx = sin x + C
9. ∫ tan x dx = ln sec x + C or − ln cos x + C
10. ∫ cot x dx = ln sin x + C
11. ∫ sec x dx = ln sec x + tan x + C
12. ∫ csc x dx = ln csc x − cot x + C
∫ sec x d x = tan x + C
2
13.

14. ∫ sec x tan x dx = sec x + C


∫ csc x dx = − cot x + C
2
15.

16. ∫ csc x cot x dx = − csc x + C


∫ tan x dx = tan x − x + C
2
17.
dx 1 x
18. ∫a 2
+x 2
= Arc tan  + C
a a
dx x
19. ∫ a2 − x2
= Arc sin   + C
a
dx 1 x 1 a
20. ∫x x2 − a2
=
a
Arc sec + C = Arc cos + C
a a x
Formulas and Theorems
1a. Definition of Limit: Let f be a function defined on an open interval containing c (except
possibly at c ) and let L be a real number. Then
lim f ( x) = L means that for each ε > 0 there
x→a
exists a δ > 0 such that f ( x) − L < ε whenever 0 < x − c < δ .
1b. A function y = f (x) is continuous at x = a if
i). f(a) exists
ii). lim f ( x) exists
x→a
iii). lim = f (a)
x→a
2. Even and Odd Functions
1. A function y = f (x) is even if f ( − x) = f ( x) for every x in the function’s domain.
Every even function is symmetric about the y-axis.
2. A function y = f (x) is odd if f ( − x) = − f ( x) for every x in the function’s domain.
Every odd function is symmetric about the origin.
3. Periodicity
A function f (x) is periodic with period p ( p > 0) if f ( x + p ) = f ( x) for every value of x
.

Note: The period of the function y = A sin( Bx + C ) or y = A cos( Bx + C ) is .
B
The amplitude is A . The period of y = tan x is π .
4. Intermediate-Value Theorem
A function y = f (x) that is continuous on a closed interval [ a, b] takes on every value between
f ( a) and f (b) .
Note: If f is continuous on [ a, b ] and f (a ) and f (b) differ in sign, then the equation
f ( x) = 0 has at least one solution in the open interval (a, b) .
5. Limits of Rational Functions as x → ±∞
f ( x)
i). lim = 0 if the degree of f ( x) < the degree of g ( x)
x → ±∞ g ( x )
x 2 − 2x
Example: lim =0
x → ∞ x3 + 3
f ( x)
ii). lim is infinite if the degrees of f ( x ) > the degree of g ( x)
x → ±∞ g ( x )

x3 + 2x
Example: lim =∞
x → ∞ x2 − 8
f ( x)
iii). lim is finite if the degree of f ( x) = the degree of g ( x)
x → ±∞ g ( x )

2 x 2 − 3x + 2 2
Example: lim =−
x → ∞ 10 x − 5 x 2 5
6. Horizontal and Vertical Asymptotes
1. A line y = b is a horizontal asymptote of the graph y = f (x) if either
lim f ( x) = b or lim f ( x) = b .
x→∞ x → −∞
2. A line x = a is a vertical asymptote of the graph y = f (x) if either
lim f ( x) = ±∞ or lim = ±∞
.
x → a+ x → a-

( x0 , y0 ) and ( x1, y1 ) are points on the graph of


7. Average and Instantaneous Rate of Change
i). Average Rate of Change: If
y = f (x) , then the average rate of change of y with respect to x over the interval
f ( x1 ) − f ( x 0 ) y1 − y 0 ∆y
[ x0 , x1 ] is = = .
x1 − x 0 x1 − x0 ∆x
ii). Instantaneous Rate of Change: If ( x 0 , y 0 ) is a point on the graph of y = f (x) , then
the instantaneous rate of change of y with respect to x at x 0 is f ′( x 0 ) .
f ( x + h) − f ( x )
8. f ′( x) = lim
h→0 h
9. The Number e as a limit
n
 1
i). lim 1 +  = e
n → +∞ n 
1
 n 
ii).
lim 1 +  n = e
n → 0 1 
10. Rolle’s Theorem
If f is continuous on [ a, b] and differentiable on ( a, b ) f (a) = f (b) , then there
such that
is at least one number c in the open interval ( a, b ) such that f ′(c) = 0 .
11. Mean Value Theorem
If f is continuous on [ a, b] and differentiable on ( a, b ) , then there is at least one number c
f (b) − f (a )
in ( a, b ) such that = f ′(c) .
b−a
12. Extreme-Value Theorem
If f is continuous on a closed interval [ a, b] , then f (x) has both a maximum and minimum
on [ a, b] .
13. To find the maximum and minimum values of a function y = f (x) , locate
1. the points where f ′(x) is zero or where f ′(x ) fails to exist.
2. the end points, if any, on the domain of f (x) .
Note: These are the only candidates for the value of x where f (x) may have a maximum or a
minimum.
14. Let f be differentiable for a < x < b and continuous for a a ≤ x ≤ b ,
1. If f ′( x) > 0 for every x in ( a, b ) , then f is increasing on [ a, b ] .
2. If f ′( x) < 0 for every x in ( a, b ) , then f is decreasing on [ a, b ] .

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