Question:

If $u(x)$ and $v(x)$ are differentiable at $x=0$, and if $u(0)=5$, $u'(0) = -3$, $v(0) = -1$ and $v'(0) = 2$, then the value of $\dfrac{d}{dx}\left(uv + \frac{u}{v}\right)$ at $x = 0$ is

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Always apply the product rule and quotient rule separately when both appear in the same expression.
Updated On: Dec 14, 2025
  • $-20$
  • $-7$
  • $6$
  • $13$
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The Correct Option is C

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Differentiate the expression.
Let $f(x) = uv + \dfrac{u}{v}$. Then, $f'(x) = u'v + uv' + \dfrac{u'v - uv'}{v^2}$.
Step 2: Substitute $x = 0$ values.
At $x = 0$: $u = 5$, $u' = -3$, $v = -1$, $v' = 2$.
Compute each term: $u'v = (-3)(-1) = 3$
$uv' = (5)(2) = 10$
$\dfrac{u'v - uv'}{v^2} = \dfrac{(-3)(-1) - (5)(2)}{(-1)^2} = \dfrac{3 - 10}{1} = -7$
Step 3: Add terms.
$f'(0) = 3 + 10 - 7 = 13$.
Step 4: Conclusion.
Thus, the derivative at $x=0$ is 13.
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