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I was trying to visualize/understand what y=(-1)x would look like since my graphing calculator won't graph it because it is discontinuous. I had a bit of luck with the integers, but getting into fractional values of x and irrationals is going to be much more time consuming and complicated.
I also thought of this:
[tex]y=(-1)^x[/tex]
[tex]\frac{dy}{dx}=(-1)^xln(-1)[/tex]
But [tex]e^{ix}=-1[/tex] hence, [tex]ix=ln(-1)[/tex]
So let's choose to the value x=1/2
y=i however the derivative is [tex]i^2\pi[/tex] which simplifies to a real number [tex]-\pi[/tex]. So while the value does not exist, the derivative does? I'm not understanding how that is possible or if there is any significance to this. Actually, I'm feeling more certain that I made some mathematically infeasible step, such as using:
[tex]\frac{d}{dx}a^{x}=\frac{a^{x}}{ln(a)}[/tex] only for values a>0, a[tex]\neq[/tex]1
Please explain this to me
edit: fixed derivative
I also thought of this:
[tex]y=(-1)^x[/tex]
[tex]\frac{dy}{dx}=(-1)^xln(-1)[/tex]
But [tex]e^{ix}=-1[/tex] hence, [tex]ix=ln(-1)[/tex]
So let's choose to the value x=1/2
y=i however the derivative is [tex]i^2\pi[/tex] which simplifies to a real number [tex]-\pi[/tex]. So while the value does not exist, the derivative does? I'm not understanding how that is possible or if there is any significance to this. Actually, I'm feeling more certain that I made some mathematically infeasible step, such as using:
[tex]\frac{d}{dx}a^{x}=\frac{a^{x}}{ln(a)}[/tex] only for values a>0, a[tex]\neq[/tex]1
Please explain this to me
edit: fixed derivative
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