Page:Calculus Made Easy.pdf/246

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
CHAPTER XX.
DODGES, PITFALLS, AND TRIUMPHS.

Dodges. A great part of the labour of integrating things consists in licking them into some shape that can be integrated. The books–and by this is meant the serious books–on the Integral Calculus are full of plans and methods and dodges and artifices for this kind of work. The following are a few of them.

Integration by Parts. This name is given to a dodge, the formula for which is

.

It is useful in some cases that you can’t tackle directly, for it shows that if in any case can be found, then can also be found. The formula can be deduced as follows. From p. 38, we have,

,

which may be written

,

which by direct integration gives the above expression.