Implicit differentiation of this equation

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I am learning Differentiation in Matlab I need help in finding implicit derivatives of this equations find dy/dx when x^2+x*y+y^2=100 Thank you.

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 23 Aug 2018
syms x y
diff(solve(x^2+x*y+y^2==100,y),x)
You will get two solutions because there are two distinct y for each x
If you want, you could continue
syms dy; solve(dy == diff(solve(x^2+x*y+y^2==100,y),x),x)
to get x in terms of dy
  2 Comments
Ankit Gupta
Ankit Gupta on 25 Aug 2018
what if i need answer in terms of x and y?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 26 Aug 2018
I do not know how to solve it in terms of x and y.

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More Answers (1)

Mbar
Mbar on 18 Oct 2020
Edited: Mbar on 18 Oct 2020
Consider implicit function . It is not always possible to solve analytically for . However, almost always you can use the Implicit Function Theorem:
, as long as .
( are partial derivatives: ).
Thus, define the implicit function, , and the derivative is
. In Matlab (using Symbolic Math Toolbox):
syms x y %Declaring symbilic variables
F(x,y) = x^2 + x*y + y^2 - 100 %Declaring implicit function
% Using Implicit Function Theorem
dy_dx = - diff(F,x)/diff(F,y)
% Answer:
% -(2*x + y)/(x + 2*y)
This derivative is a function of both x and y. However it has a meaning only for pairs which satisfy the implicit function . You can solve for such points using what Walter Roberson suggested. For example, solve for y as a function of x, and substitute :
double(subs(solve(F, y), x, 10))
This gives two points which satisfy the implicit function: , and . You can calculate the derivatve at these points for example:
x0 = 10; y0 = -10;
F(x0, y0) %answer 0, i.e. the implicit function is satisfied.
dy_dx(x0, y0) %answer 1
x1 = 10; y1 = 0;
F(x1, y1) %answer 0, i.e. the implicit function is satisfied.
dy_dx(x1, y1) %answer -2

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