Mister Exam

You entered:

xcosx2xdx

What you mean?

Integral of xcosx2xdx dx

Limits of integration:

from to
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The graph:

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Piecewise:

The solution

You have entered [src]
  1                  
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 |  x*cos(x)*2*x*1 dx
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$$\int\limits_{0}^{1} x \cos{\left(x \right)} 2 x 1\, dx$$
Integral(x*cos(x)*2*x*1, (x, 0, 1))
Detail solution
  1. The integral of a constant times a function is the constant times the integral of the function:

    1. Use integration by parts:

      Let and let .

      Then .

      To find :

      1. The integral of cosine is sine:

      Now evaluate the sub-integral.

    2. Use integration by parts:

      Let and let .

      Then .

      To find :

      1. The integral of sine is negative cosine:

      Now evaluate the sub-integral.

    3. The integral of a constant times a function is the constant times the integral of the function:

      1. The integral of cosine is sine:

      So, the result is:

    So, the result is:

  2. Add the constant of integration:


The answer is:

The answer (Indefinite) [src]
  /                                                           
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 | x*cos(x)*2*x*1 dx = C - 4*sin(x) + 2*x *sin(x) + 4*x*cos(x)
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$$2\,\left(\left(x^2-2\right)\,\sin x+2\,x\,\cos x\right)$$
The graph
The answer [src]
-2*sin(1) + 4*cos(1)
$$2\,\left(2\,\cos 1-\sin 1\right)$$
=
=
-2*sin(1) + 4*cos(1)
$$- 2 \sin{\left(1 \right)} + 4 \cos{\left(1 \right)}$$
Numerical answer [src]
0.478267253856766
0.478267253856766
The graph
Integral of xcosx2xdx dx

    Use the examples entering the upper and lower limits of integration.