How do you differentiate given tan^2(x)?

1 Answer
Nov 23, 2016

d/dx[tan^2x]=2tanxsec^2x.

Explanation:

The big idea here is that we are squaring something. The derivative of x^2 is 2x, so the derivative of u squared (u stands for any function) is 2u * (the derivative of u).

This is by the chain rule.

In other words, d/dx[u^2]=2u*d/dx[u].

So d/dx[tan^2x]=2tanx*d/dx[tanx].

Remember that d/dx[tanx]=sec^2x, so our final answer is d/dx[tan^2x]=2tanxsec^2x.

If you don't remember why or how d/dx[tanx]=sec^2x, rewrite tanx=sinx/cosx and take the derivative using the quotient rule.

d/dx[tanx]=d/dx[sinx/cosx]=(cos^2x-(-sin^2x))/cos^2x=1/cos^2x=sec^2x