You can take either one, but not both. Because the substitution needs to be one-to-one mapping.Suppose my substitution was x = u^2 -1
When changing bounds, do I take u = +- sqrt(x+1) ? Explain why.
are you serious?No, you can't take either one. You can try it out with a random definite integral; only one will give the correct answer.
You forget that we reverse the limits due to the substitution being in the second case. This means that in our integrand the becomes .Not true.
When you take the limits -1 and -sqrt2, they are in REVERSE order. So you get MINUS the other answer.
Try it.
lol. I only change limits but keep other parts unchanged because in my example I did NOT have the term , so I did not need to change the integrand.Hang on a moment .... You changed the actual substitution.
In Frank Xie's example, he used the SAME algebraic substitution in each case, using the negative version ONLY to get the new limits.
Yes, if you use the minus formula for BOTH the algebraic substitution AND the new limits, you will always get the same answer, but that is NOT what he did, and I was debating the issue based on that premise.