Textbooks that use notation with explicit argument variable in the upper bound &#x222B;<!-

Shomalit4ob5

Shomalit4ob5

Answered question

2022-06-04

Textbooks that use notation with explicit argument variable in the upper bound x for "indefinite integrals."
I dare to ask a question similar to a closed one but more precise.
Are there any established textbooks or other serious published work that use x notation instead of for the so-called "indefinite integrals"?
(I believe I've seen it already somewhere, probably in the Internet, but I cannot find it now.)
So, I am looking for texts where the indefinite integral of cos would be written something like:
x cos ( t ) d t = sin ( x ) C
or x cos ( x ) d x = sin ( x ) + C .
(This notation looks more sensible and consistent with the one for definite integrals than the common one with bare .)
IMO, the indefinite integral of f on a given interval I of definition of f should not be defined as the set of antiderivatives of f on I but as the set of all functions F of the form
F ( x ) = a x f ( t ) d t + C , x I ,,
with a I and C a constant (or as a certain indefinite particular function of such form). In other words, I think that indefinite integrals should be defined in terms of definite integrals and not in terms of antiderivatives. (After all, the integral sign historically stood for a sum.)
In this case, the fact that the indefinite integral of a continuous function f on an interval I coincides with the set of antiderivatives of f on I is the contents of the first and the second fundamental theorems of calculus:
1. The first fundamental theorem of calculus says that every representative of the indefinite integral of f on I is an antiderivative of f on I, and
2. The second fundamental theorem of calculus says that every antiderivative of f on I is a representative of the indefinite integral of f on I (it is an easy corollary of the first one together with the mean value theorem).

Answer & Explanation

Regelspur8xgdl

Regelspur8xgdl

Beginner2022-06-05Added 6 answers

Step 1
That notation is used in the classic textbook Elementary Differential Equations by William E. Boyce and Richard C. DiPrima, at least in the third edition (1976), which is the one I have. Quoting from p. 11 (beginning of Chapter 2):
The simplest type of first order differential equation occurs when f dependsonly on x. In this case (2) y = f ( x ) and we seek a function y = ϕ ( x ) whose derivative is the given function f. From elementary calculus we know that ϕ is an antiderivative of f, and we write (3) y = ϕ ( x ) = x f ( t ) d t + c ,
where c is an arbitrary constant. For example, if y = sin 2 x ,, then y = ϕ ( x ) = 1 2 cos 2 x + c ..
In Eq. (3) and elsewhere in this book we use the notation x f ( t ) d t to denote an antiderivative of the function f; that is, F ( x ) = x f ( t ) d t designates some particular representative of the class of functions whose derivatives are equal to f. All members of this class are included in the expression F ( x ) + c, where c is an arbitrary constant.
Step 2
P.S. On second thought, I'm not sure Boyce and DiPrima use the notation x f ( t ) d t in quite the same way you do. For them the general solution of the differential equation y = f ( x ) is y = x f ( t ) d t + c since y = x f ( t ) d t is some (unspecified) particular solution; but for you I think y = x f ( t ) d t is already the general solution.

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