sec(x)-tan(x)=cos(x)
I know that there are 2 answers. They need to be on the interval of 0 to 2pi.
What I tried was the following:
sec(x)=1/cos
tan(x)=sin(x)/cos(x)
so
(1/cos(x))-(sin(x)/cos(x))=cos(x)
Then I found a common denominator...
(1-sin(x))/cos(x)=(cos^2(x)/cos(x))
Then I multiplied by the reciprocal of (cos^2(x)/cos(x))
(1-sin(x))/cos(x)(cos(x)/cos^2(x))=(cos^2(x)/cos(x))(cos(x)/cos^2(x))
so that simplifies to...
(1-sin(x))/(cos^2(x))=1
and now I am stuck. I don't even know if I was doing it correctly. Please HELP!
I know that there are 2 answers. They need to be on the interval of 0 to 2pi.
What I tried was the following:
sec(x)=1/cos
tan(x)=sin(x)/cos(x)
so
(1/cos(x))-(sin(x)/cos(x))=cos(x)
Then I found a common denominator...
(1-sin(x))/cos(x)=(cos^2(x)/cos(x))
Then I multiplied by the reciprocal of (cos^2(x)/cos(x))
(1-sin(x))/cos(x)(cos(x)/cos^2(x))=(cos^2(x)/cos(x))(cos(x)/cos^2(x))
so that simplifies to...
(1-sin(x))/(cos^2(x))=1
and now I am stuck. I don't even know if I was doing it correctly. Please HELP!