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[parent] proof of quotient rule (using product rule) (Proof)

Suppose $f$ and $g$ are differentiable functions defined on some interval of $ \mathbbmss{R}$ , and $g$ never vanishes. Let us prove that $$ \left( \frac{f}{g}\right)' = \frac{ f' g - f g'}{g^2}. $$

Using the product rule $(fg)'=f'g + fg'$ , and $(g^{-1})'=-g^{-2}g'$ , we have \begin{eqnarray*} \left( \frac{f}{g}\right)' &=& (f g^{-1})' \\ &=& f' g^{-1} + f (g^{-1})' \\ &=& f' g^{-1} + f (-1) g^{-2} g'\\ &=& \frac{f'}{g} - \frac{fg'}{g^2} \\ &=& \frac{f'g- fg'}{g^2}. \end{eqnarray*}Here $g^{-1}=1/g$ and $g^{-2}=1/g^2$ .




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Cross-references: product rule, vanishes, interval, differentiable functions

This is version 2 of proof of quotient rule (using product rule), born on 2005-02-06, modified 2005-02-06.
Object id is 6719, canonical name is ProofOfQuotientRuleUsingProductRule.
Accessed 5021 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC26A06 (Real functions :: Functions of one variable :: One-variable calculus)

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