thanks yllanes![]()
yes that makes sense....i'll see if i can get the right answer for dy^2/dx^2
Um, you mean d^2y/dx^2, don't you?
FYI there is a reason for the notation, though it is mostly historical curiousity now. The idea was that "d" was an operator, which took the value an infinitesmal away and subtracted it from the original. (And at the end you'd drop any infinitesmal remainders as meaningless.) So dy/dx meant d
As I said, this is mostly historical curiousity. But if you were trying to compute a numerical approximation to the derivative, you'd find that the formulas you'd come up with have a very close relation to what the formula says.
Cheers,
Ben