A sort of multiplication table for trig functions and inverse trig functions.
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A sort of multiplication table for trig functions and inverse trig functions.
Trig of inverse trig
Table summarizing results for applying a trig function to an inverse trig function, such as sine of arctangent etc. With geometric proofs.
John D. Cook | Applied Mathematics Consulting (www.johndcook.com)
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A sort of multiplication table for trig functions and inverse trig functions.
Trig of inverse trig
Table summarizing results for applying a trig function to an inverse trig function, such as sine of arctangent etc. With geometric proofs.
John D. Cook | Applied Mathematics Consulting (www.johndcook.com)
@johndcook There are some problems with this table, for example tan(asin(x))=x/sqrt(1-x^2)) and cannot be x/sqrt(1+x^2) because it should well defined only on ]-1,1[. Same problem tan(acos(x)) and reversely with sin(tan(x)) and cos(atan(x)) well defined on R.
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@johndcook There are some problems with this table, for example tan(asin(x))=x/sqrt(1-x^2)) and cannot be x/sqrt(1+x^2) because it should well defined only on ]-1,1[. Same problem tan(acos(x)) and reversely with sin(tan(x)) and cos(atan(x)) well defined on R.
@uxor You're right. Thanks! Fixing it now.
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A sort of multiplication table for trig functions and inverse trig functions.
Trig of inverse trig
Table summarizing results for applying a trig function to an inverse trig function, such as sine of arctangent etc. With geometric proofs.
John D. Cook | Applied Mathematics Consulting (www.johndcook.com)
@johndcook Nice!
As you no doubt know, "row" then "column" is fairly conventional e.g. in analogy with a Cayley table... though, I'd say, that analogy really works in your favour if you put a function composition symbol, i.e. "o", in the top left corner. Then we have f o g which is f(g(x)).
Otherwise, one might read "row first" as f(x) and "then column" giving g(f(x)), which is possibly how the original author was thinking about it.
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A sort of multiplication table for trig functions and inverse trig functions.
Trig of inverse trig
Table summarizing results for applying a trig function to an inverse trig function, such as sine of arctangent etc. With geometric proofs.
John D. Cook | Applied Mathematics Consulting (www.johndcook.com)
@johndcook Composition, not multiplication, no? But I take your point and quite like your compact display. The display style has wider applicability, and I will steal it!
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