I found the following integral evaluation very interesting to me:
Integral of product of two error functions (erf)
and I hoped that I could use that result to evaluate the following integral: $ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\exp\left(-t^{2}\right)\,\mathrm{erfc}\left(t-c\right)\,\mathrm{erfc}\left(d-t\right)\,\mathrm{d}t=\frac{4}{\pi}\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\exp\left(-t^{2}\right)\int_{t-c}^{\infty}\int_{d-t}^{\infty}\exp\left(-u^{2}-v^{2}\right)\,\mathrm{d}u\,\mathrm{d}v\,\mathrm{d}t $
So I note that $u\geq t-c$, $v\geq d-t$,
thus $t\leq u+c$ and $t\geq d-v$,
thus $d-v\leq t\leq u+c$ and $u+v\geq d-c$.
Hence $ \frac{4}{\pi}\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\exp\left(-t^{2}\right)\int_{d-t}^{\infty}\int_{t-c}^{\infty}\exp\left(-u^{2}-v^{2}\right)\,\mathrm{d}u\,\mathrm{d}v\,\mathrm{d}t= $ $ \qquad\qquad =\frac{4}{\pi}\int\!\int_{u+v>d-c}\exp\left(-u^{2}-v^{2}\right)\,\int_{d-v}^{u+c}\exp\left(-t^{2}\right)\,\mathrm{d}t\,\mathrm{d}u\,\mathrm{d}v $
I know that $ \int_{d-v}^{u+c}\exp\left(-t^{2}\right)\,\mathrm{d}t=\frac{1}{2}\sqrt{\pi}\left(\mathrm{erf}\left(u+c\right)-\mathrm{erf}\left(d-v\right)\right) $
but I don't quite understand how I should deal with $\frac{4}{\pi}\int\!\int_{u+v>d-c}\exp\left(-u^{2}-v^{2}\right)\mathrm{d}u\,\mathrm{d}v\,. $ What limits of integration I should use there? Thanks for any suggestions.