$\int\text{e}^\text{x}\sec\text{x}(1+\tan\text{x})\text{dx}$ equals
- $\text{e}^\text{x}\cos\text{x}+\text{C}$
- $\text{e}^\text{x}\sec\text{x}+\text{C}$
- $\text{e}^\text{x}\sin\text{x}+\text{C}$
- $\text{e}^\text{x}\tan\text{x}+\text{C}$
$\int\text{e}^\text{x}\sec\text{x}(1+\tan\text{x})\text{dx}$
Let $\text{I}=\int\text{e}^\text{x}\sec\text{x}(1+\tan\text{x})\text{dx}=\int\text{e}^\text{x}(\sec\text{x}+\sec\text{x}\tan\text{x})\text{dx}$
Also, let $\sec\text{x}=\text{f}(\text{x})\Rightarrow \ \sec\text{x}\tan\text{x}=\text{f}'(\text{x})$
It is known that, $\int\text{e}^\text{x}\{\text{f}(\text{x})+\text{f}'(\text{x})\}\text{dx}=\text{e}^\text{x}\text{f}(\text{x})+\text{C}$
$\therefore\ \text{I}=\text{e}^\text{x}\sec\text{x}+\text{C}$
Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.
$ 3 x+5 y+\lambda z=3 $
$ 7 x+11 y-9 z=2 $
$ 97 x+155 y-189 z=\mu$
has infinitely many solutions, then $\mu+2 \lambda$ is equal to :