This article is about a differentiation rule, i.e., a rule for differentiating a function expressed in terms of other functions whose derivatives are known.
View other differentiation rules
Statement
Version type |
Statement
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specific point, named functions |
This states that if and are times differentiable functions at , then the pointwise product is also times differentiable at , and we have:
![{\displaystyle {\frac {d^{n}}{dx^{n}}}[f(x)g(x)]|_{x=x_{0}}=\sum _{k=0}^{n}{\binom {n}{k}}f^{(k)}(x_{0})g^{(n-k)}(x_{0})}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/7e6d3aca17fcfbc18dd59cefde74cb4b1aa9c932) Here, denotes the derivative of (with , etc.), denotes the derivative of , and is the binomial coefficient. These are the same as the coefficients that appear in the expansion of .
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generic point, named functions, point notation |
If and are functions of one variable, the following holds wherever the right side makes sense:
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generic point, named functions, point-free notation |
If and are functions of one variable, the following holds wherever the right side makes sense:
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Pure Leibniz notation |
Suppose and are both variables functionally dependent on . Then
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One-sided version
There are analogues of each of the statements with one-sided derivatives. Fill this in later
Particular cases
Value of  |
Formula for
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1 |
(this is the usual product rule for differentiation).
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2 |
.
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3 |
.
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4 |
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5 |
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Significance
Qualitative and existential significance
Each of the versions has its own qualitative significance:
Version type |
Significance
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specific point, named functions |
This tells us that if and are both times differentiable at a point , so is .
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generic point, named functions, point notation |
This tells us that if and are both times differentiable on an open interval, so is .
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generic point, named functions, point-free notation |
This shows that the way that behaves is governed by the nature of the derivatives (up to the ) of and . In particular, if and are both continuous functions on an interval, so is .
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Computational feasibility significance
Each of the version has its own computational feasibility significance===
Version type |
Significance
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specific point, named functions |
This tells us that knowing the values (in the sense of numerical values) of and at a point allows us to compute the value by plugging into the formula and doing a bunch of multiplications and additions.
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generic point, named functions |
This tells us that knowledge of the generic expressions for and allows us to compute the generic expression for .
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