the question is:
x dy/dx= 2y ; y(0)=0
because when i solve this problem the integration constant 'c' gets zero... and i have to find its value in order to calculate a solution to given IVP
the question is:
x dy/dx= 2y ; y(0)=0
because when i solve this problem the integration constant 'c' gets zero... and i have to find its value in order to calculate a solution to given IVP
Solving this problem, I get \begin{equation} y = ax^2 \end{equation} with $a$ a constant. Could you use this constant to find a solution for your IVP ?
---UPDATE---
I don't think this differential equation has a unique solution, if you check http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/PicardsTheorem2.html you see that \begin{equation} f(x,y) = \frac{2y}{x} \end{equation} is not continuous in $(0,0)$, so Picard's Theorem doesn't hold.