Quiz:Differentiation rules

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Review the rules before or while attempting the quiz questions: [SHOW MORE]

See also Category:Differentiation rules for a list of all the differentiation rules pages (including pages for higher derivatives, which are not in this table).

Qualitative and existential questions

1 Suppose f and g are both functions from R to R. Suppose further that f and g are both differentiable at a point x0R. Which of the following functions can we not guarantee to be differentiable at x0?

The sum f+g, i.e., the function xf(x)+g(x)
The difference fg, i.e., the function xf(x)g(x)
The product fg, i.e., the function xf(x)g(x)
The composite fg, i.e., the function xf(g(x))
None of the above, i.e., they are all guaranteed to be differentiable.

2 Suppose f and g are both functions from R to R that are everywhere differentiable. Which of the following can we not guarantee is everywhere differentiable?

The sum f+g, i.e., the function xf(x)+g(x)
The difference fg, i.e., the function xf(x)g(x)
The product fg, i.e., the function xf(x)g(x)
The composite fg, i.e., the function xf(g(x))
None of the above, i.e., they are all guaranteed to be everywhere differentiable

3 Suppose f and g are both functions from R to R and the left hand derivatives for f and g exist on all of R. For which of the following functions can we not guarantee that the left hand derivative exists on all of R?

The sum f+g, i.e., the function xf(x)+g(x)
The difference fg, i.e., the function xf(x)g(x)
The product fg, i.e., the function xf(x)g(x)
The composite fg, i.e., the function xf(g(x))
None of the above, i.e., they are all guaranteed to have a left hand derivative on all of R


Generic point computation questions

1 Which of the following verbal statements is not valid as a general rule?

The derivative of the sum of two functions is the sum of the derivatives of the functions.
The derivative of the difference of two functions is the difference of the derivatives of the functions.
The derivative of a constant times a function is the same constant times the derivative of the function.
The derivative of the product of two functions is the product of the derivatives of the functions.
None of the above, i.e., they are all valid as general rules.

2 Suppose f and g are both twice differentiable functions everywhere on R. Which of the following is the correct formula for (fg), the second derivative of the pointwise product of functions?

fg+fg
fg+fg+fg
fg+2fg+fg
fgfg+fg
fg2fg+fg

3 Suppose f and g are both twice differentiable functions everywhere on R. Which of the following is the correct formula for (fg), the second derivative of the composite of two functions?

(fg)g
(fg)(fg)g
(fg)(fg)(fg)
(fg)(g)2+(fg)g
(fg)(fg)+(fg)

4 Suppose f1,f2,f3 are everywhere differentiable functions from R to R. What is the derivative (f1f2f3), where f1f2f3 denotes the pointwise product of functions?

f1f2f3
f1f2f3+f1f2f3+f1f2f3
f1f2f3+f1f2f3+f1f2f3
f1f2+f2f3+f3f1
f1f2f3

5 Suppose f1,f2,f3 are everywhere differentiable functions from R to R. What is the derivative (f1f2f3) where denotes the composite of two functions? In other words, (f1f2f3)(x):=f1(f2(f3(x))).

(f1f2f3)(f2f3)f3
(f1f2f3)(f2f3)f3
(f1f2f3)(f2f3)f3
(f1f2f3)(f2f3)f3
f1f2f3


Predicting when things become zero

The questions here can be done in two ways. The first is to use the abstract differentiation rules to figure things out. The second is to actually determine the possibilities for the functions at hand, and then figure out what we can say about their sums, products, and composites.

1 Suppose f,g are everywhere differentiable functions on R and f=g=0 everywhere. For which of the following functions can we not conclude that the derivative is zero everywhere?

f+g
fg
fg
All of the above, i.e., we cannot conclude for sure that the derivative is zero for any of these functions.
None of the above, i.e., the derivative is necessarily zero everywhere for each of these functions

2 Suppose f,g are everywhere twice differentiable functions on R and f=g=0 everywhere. For which of the following functions can we not conclude that the second derivative is zero everywhere?

f+g
fg
fg
All of the above, i.e., we cannot conclude for sure that the second derivative is zero for any of these functions.
None of the above, i.e., the second derivative is necessarily zero everywhere for each of these functions

3 Suppose f,g are everywhere thrice differentiable functions on R and f=g=0 everywhere. For which of the following functions can we definitively conclude that the third derivative is zero everywhere?

f+g
fg
fg
All of the above, i.e., the third derivative is zero everywhere for each of these functions
None of the above, i.e., the third derivative is not necessarily zero everywhere for any of these functions