What is the Sum Rule for derivatives?

1 Answer

The sum rule for derivatives states that the derivative of a sum is equal to the sum of the derivatives.

In symbols, this means that for

f(x) = g(x) + h(x)f(x)=g(x)+h(x)

we can express the derivative of f(x)f(x), f'(x), as

f'(x) = g'(x) + h'(x).

For an example, consider a cubic function:

f(x) = Ax^3 + Bx^2 + Cx + D.

Note that A, B, C, and D are all constants. Now we will make use of three other basic properties, two of which are illustrated together below, without proof.

d/dx(c*f(x)) = c*((df)/dx) and d/dx(c) = 0, where c represents any constant.

The third is the Power Rule, which states that for a quantity x^n, d/dx(x^n) = nx^(n-1). This will also be accepted here without proof, in interests of brevity. Note that for the case n=1, we would be taking the derivative of x with respect to x, which would inherently be one. Thus d/dx x = 1

Using all four of these properties, we can find the derivative of our cubic expression.

d/dx f(x) = d/dx[Ax^3 + Bx^2 + Cx +D]

= d/dx Ax^3 + d/dx Bx^2 + d/dx Cx + d/dx D

= A(d/dx x^3) + B(d/dx x^2) + C(d/dx x) + D(d/dx 1)

= A(3x^2) + B(2x) + C(1) + 0

(df)/dx = 3Ax^2 + 2Bx +C