How to prove this trigonometric identity?

Personal

1 Answer
Dec 3, 2016

See below

Explanation:

cos2x=cos^2x-sin^2
sin2x=2sinxcosx
Are you happy about these identities?
If so then proving identities, as above, is a matter of doing something and seeing where you get to!!!
LHS can be written

(cosx-(cos^2x-sin^2x)+2)/(3sinx-2sinxcosx)
=(cosx-cos^2x+sin^2x+2)/(sinx(3-2cosx))
RHS (1+cosx)/sinx
Multiply LHS and RHS by sinx(3-2cosx)
LHS=cosx-cos^2x+sin^2x+2

RHS=(1+cosx)(3-2cosx)
=3-2cosx+3cosx-2cos^2x
=3+cosx-2cos^2x
Now looking at the LHS and remembering that sin^2x+cos^2x=1or sin^2x=1-cos^2x
LHS=cosx-cos^2x+(1-cos^2x)+2
=cosx-2cos^2x+3

We are there!!!
Difficult for me to write this really clearly here, paper would be easier!!!
BUT THE IMPORTANT THING WITH IDENTITIES IS DO SOMETHING AND YOU WILL GET THERE.