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22:13
I just found out that I have to get all As for the next year to be able to meet the minimum GPA requirement
is that even possible? are there people that do that
@KannappanSampath http://chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/36/2012/4/5
Oh, I see tb already got it.
I am still unable to see what Matt referred to.
@robjohn Thank you, any way. :)
@MattN Wait. What?
Oh, I see. Let me read through and get back.
22:20
@tb I can't make sense of it right off.
Will will love those last few pages of the transcript :)
^ another one for him :)
:-)
@JonasTeuwen no you didn't really :-)
@tb the deletions won't show in the transcript.
they will if he uses the "load to my last message" feature.
Me neither.
@MattN did I abuse tb and not remember? darn!
22:24
I never saw that...
Chrome snapped.
The "I never saw that" was referring to Rob's message flash.
Sorry no offense intended for anyone.
I feel very offended.
@JonasTeuwen by?
I don't know 8-).
@robjohn Kannappan, who else? He's always offending me... :)
@JonasTeuwen So you're offended by ignorance?
22:29
If I am trying to optimize something and I am trying to find the derivative of something like (4x+2)^2 = area can I just find the derivative of 4x+2 and then square the resulting area?
Yes! 8-).
@tb Hmmm, Really?
@Jordan perhaps I am not understanding your question
Oh why not?
@KannappanSampath oh, boy... No, don't worry; it was just a silly joke on your being afraid of offending somebody where there is not the slightest chance of any kind of offense in your four posts. :)
22:32
In the case of $(4x+2)^2$, you can
I am trying to find the derivative of (4x+2)^2 = area, to simplify finding the derivative can I say that the derivatives squar rootis equal to that results square
However in general, say $1+(4x+2)^2$ this doesn't work
Actually, let's go back to your example..
$\text{area}=(4x+2)^2$
take the derivative of $4x+2 \to 4$
that never equals $0$
I don't know what that means...4?
You asked about taking the derivative of $4x+2$. That is $4$
22:38
yes
but when trying to optimize the area of something is it okay to factor things out of the formula and then apply those later after you derive?
@Jordan you have to be careful that everything is monotonic
I do not know what monotonic is
so what you want to do is to optimize the square root and then square that to get the final answer?
yes
@robjohn I think the question really is not about slick tricks but rather on how to compute the derivative of a polynomial.
For those the answer is simply: no you're not allowed to simplify this way.
22:43
I am just looking for an easier way to do some optimization problems
I dont understnad if I have $(4x^2 + 3x +2)/2 = area$ why cant I just have $(4x^2 + 3x +2) = 2area$
This is perfectly fine.
What makes you think that this wouldn't be okay?
I am trying to do it now and it doesnt really seem to work
So you want to find the $x$ such that the area is minimal, right?
yes
So, what did you get?
22:48
Got it I believe!
OK!
The first step would be to take the derivative of the left hand side.
What did you get for that?
well for something simple if I have something like $(3x+2)^2$ the derivative would be $6(3x+2)$
@Jordan yes.
right. But you had $(4x^2 + 3x + 2)$ before.
so for x=2 I would get 48, but if I were to take the square of (3x+2) it wouldn't be the same
22:50
Why $x = 2$?
just a random number
@tb okay, I am totally missing his point then :-)
sorry, I had to go afk for a while
@Jordan okay. But the question was to find the minimal area, so you now have to find the roots of the derivative.
Oh...so the values won't be the same...but the roots will?
Wait. You have $\text{area} = (3x+2)^2$ in your latest example. Now you want to find the $x$ for which this is minimal.
22:53
well actually now I am confused because the roots are $-2/3$ and then for the other one it is the square root of -2/3
You computed the derivative correctly to be $6(3x+2)$.
And the root is $-2/3$.
@tb sorry, I was thinking too generally.
@Jordan: this is the case that I was talking about earlier, where the roots of the derivative are the same as the roots of the function.
Ok and then to find the square root of the derivative of 3x+2
but you cant find the square root of a negative
no find the roots... that is where $6(3x+2)=0$
not the square roots
find the roots and them find the square roots of those?
that is -2/3s for both
22:58
why are you taking square roots?
instead of finding $(3x+2)^2$ can't I find the square root of the derivative of $(3x+2)$
no. what you want to do is to take the derivative of the area, find where it is 0 and plug that back into the area
If the values of where the derivative is 0 make sense.
In your example, the derivative of the area is $6(3x+2)$
@Jordan Your comments under Arturo's answer are rather rude.
which ones?
Please delete them and respect the suggestions you have been given.
23:03
I don't see how it is disrespectful to disagree with someone, that is what I believe because it is what I see to be true with empirical evidence.
If confusion persists about Rolle and MVT, you can ask for clarifications. But, choosing to disagree there seems to me, not a wise thign to do.
Ok so it is always wrong to say that the derivative of $(3x+2)^2 = x is the same as (3x+2) = \sqrt{x}$
Oh well I do not understand what he is trying to say because my book says something else
I recall Prof. Jyrki here. I was foolish. Thanks to @tb for saving me from further shame.
@Jordan So, why do you hold him at fault? It is YOU who did not understand. Not they, Right?
I do not hold him at fault, I am just trying to learn
But, that is not evident from your comments there.
23:07
@Jordan it is alway wrong to say the derivative of $(3x+2)^2=x$
ok...
so instead of x on the left make it 2
you can take the derivative of a function, not an equation (but you can take the derivative of both sides of an equation)
Indian Police Service?
It's plain silly?
Hmm. I give up. I cannot think of mathematical ips-es.
@tb shouldn't that either be $C[0,2\pi]$ or $e^{i2\pi nx}$?
23:13
Okay then so if I am trying to find the optimization of something then what do I do if the formula is too complex to derive?
@Jordan There never is. :)
@tb But, why after this long?
It's old--very old.
Okay then so if I am trying to find the optimization of something then what do I do if the formula is too complex for me to derive?
@robjohn yes, of course. I'm still dumbfounded by the i.p.s.
@KannappanSampath for some reason Matt bumped the question.
@tb Hah. Did not notice. Thank you.
@tb The Inner Product Space comment disappeared.
@tb but Sam's comment seems to address most points.
23:18
I just spent an hour trying to learn about MVT and learned nothing
It might be a feeling.
Given you had the guts to say Arturo was confusing between things. :P
Well, time to hit the bed. Bye. (for real, @tb)
23:38
so an inverse trig function is the inverse of the result of the function correct?
@MarianoSuárezAlvarez: I tried to support your comment, but so far with little success :/
It is so depressing to be failing high school math in my mid twenties, that dude on here is 17
May I ask for a few votes on this comment so that it becomes visible "above the fold"?
Jordan, please try to limit the drama
23:58
how do I find roots for (x^2-x)=16?

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