Calculus: Early Transcendentals 9th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1337613924
ISBN 13: 978-1-33761-392-7

Chapter 14 - Section 14.5 - The Chain Rule. - 14.5 Exercise - Page 992: 34

Answer

$\dfrac{e^y \cos x -1-y}{x-e^y \sin x}$

Work Step by Step

Recall Equation 6: $\dfrac{dy}{dx}=-\dfrac{F_x}{F_y}$ ...(1) Given: $e^y \sin x=x+xy$ $\implies e^y \sin x-x-xy=0$ Let us consider that $F(x,y)=e^y \sin x-x-xy=0$ $F_x=e^y \cos x -1-y\\F_y=e^y \sin x -x$ Equation (1) becomes: $\dfrac{dy}{dx}=-\dfrac{F_x}{F_y}=-\dfrac{e^y \cos x -1-y}{e^y \sin x -x}=\dfrac{e^y \cos x -1-y}{x-e^y \sin x}$
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