I would like to know, how do you simplify this: $\cos x\sin(x+y) + \sin x\cos(x+y)$ to this: $\sin(2x+y).$
Wolfram alpha says so, but how does human being do so? :)
I would like to know, how do you simplify this: $\cos x\sin(x+y) + \sin x\cos(x+y)$ to this: $\sin(2x+y).$
Wolfram alpha says so, but how does human being do so? :)
I hope you are aware of the $\sin(A+B)$ formula which is $\sin(A+B)=\sin{A}\cos{B}+ \cos{A}\sin{B}$.
For a complete list of Trigonometric identities please see:
A human being uses the addition formula for the sine $\sin(\alpha+\beta) = \sin\alpha\cos\beta + \cos\alpha\sin\beta$ And applies it with $\alpha=x+y$ and $\beta=x$.
We know that $\sin(x+y) = \sin x \cos y + \cos x \sin y$ and $\cos(x+y) = \cos x \cos y - \sin x \sin y$.