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You should be able to solve this

Name: The Silent Wind of Doom 2008-12-14 19:29

Show me what ya got.

1) If f(x) + f\left(\frac{1}{1-x}\right) = x+1 for all x \ne 1, find a formula for f(x).

2) If a,b,c,d are distinct
numbers such that for some number k
a^4+a^2+ka+64=0
b^4+b^2+kb+64=0
c^4+c^2+kc+64=0
d^4+d^2+kd+64=0
find a^2 + b^2 + c^2 + d^2.

3) Let f be an infinitely differentiable function on [0,1).  Extend f to \mathbb{R^+} by defining f(x) = f(x-1) + f'(x-1) when x \ge 1.  Find a one term expression for f involving only elementary functions, the differentiation operator, the floor operator, and f evaluated on [0,1).

(inb4 the TeX's all fucked up)

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-16 17:58

>>17
The "One-Term" part (you can rewrite the sum in a much nicer form).

>>18
That's not exactly what I had in mind, but if it works, then that's just as nice (I don't have time to check it now).  I was thinking D^[n] * (f({x})*e^x) / e^x (or something like that).

They're from 99chan.org/calc, and the threads have the answers (which I gave) in them.

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