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/sci/ - Science & Math


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5323508 No.5323508 [Reply] [Original]

Hey /sci/ I have been on this question and wanted to see if my response is valid.
The question is, "Explain exactly what is meant by the statement that 'differentiation and integration are inverse processes'."
My response is "Differentiation is rate of change and integration is rate of change of an accumulation (rate of change of area for a function) which is equal to the function itself."
Am I on the right track or have I totally missed the point?

>> No.5323522

Your response has nothing to do with the question, dummy.

>> No.5323547

>>5323522
That's kind of what I figured, could you give me some insight?

>> No.5323574

You could probably get by with saying "The integral is an antiderivative plus a constant function, where the the derivative of the antiderivative of a function is the same function."