Unlock the Chain Rule: Essential AP Calculus Guide for Beginners

Chain Rule

When a function is built by plugging one function into another, we call it a composite function.

The Chain Rule is the engine that differentiates such compositions. This article gives intuition, the formal statement, a proof, and worked examples you can copy for practice.

Intuition: Rates Inside Rates

If a quantity \(y\) depends on an intermediate variable \(u\), and \(u\) depends on \(x\), then changes in \(x\) ripple through \(u\) to affect \(y\).

Symbolically, let \(y=f(u)\) and \(u=g(x)\). A small change \(\Delta x\) produces \(\Delta u \approx g'(x)\,\Delta x\), which then produces \(\Delta y \approx f'(u)\,\Delta u\).

Multiplying the rates suggests \(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx} \approx f'(u)\,g'(x)\), evaluated at \(u=g(x)\). The Chain Rule makes this exact.

Formal Statement (Two Equivalent Forms)

Function Composition Form

If \(g\) is differentiable at \(x\) and \(f\) is differentiable at \(g(x)\), then the composite \(F(x)=f(g(x))\) is differentiable at \(x\), and

\(F'(x)=f’\!\big(g(x)\big)\cdot g'(x).\)

Leibniz Form

Writing \(y=f(u)\) and \(u=g(x)\) with both differentiable,

\(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx}=\frac{dy}{du}\cdot\frac{du}{dx},\)

where \(\displaystyle\frac{dy}{du}\) is evaluated at \(u=g(x)\) and \(\displaystyle\frac{du}{dx}\) at \(x\).

A Proof of the Chain Rule

Setup

Let \(y=f(u)\) with \(f\) differentiable at \(b=g(a)\), and let \(u=g(x)\) be differentiable at \(a\).

Define the increments \(\Delta x\), \(\Delta u=g(a+\Delta x)-g(a)\), and \(\Delta y=f(b+\Delta u)-f(b)\).

By the definition of differentiability, there exist functions \(\varepsilon_1(\Delta x)\) and \(\varepsilon_2(\Delta u)\) with \(\varepsilon_1\to 0\) as \(\Delta x\to 0\) and \(\varepsilon_2\to 0\) as \(\Delta u\to 0\) such that

\(\Delta u = g'(a)\,\Delta x + \varepsilon_1(\Delta x)\,\Delta x = \big[g'(a)+\varepsilon_1(\Delta x)\big]\Delta x,\)

\(\Delta y = f'(b)\,\Delta u + \varepsilon_2(\Delta u)\,\Delta u = \big[f'(b)+\varepsilon_2(\Delta u)\big]\Delta u.\)

Combine

Substitute the expression for \(\Delta u\) into \(\Delta y\):

\(\Delta y = \big[f'(b)+\varepsilon_2(\Delta u)\big]\big[g'(a)+\varepsilon_1(\Delta x)\big]\Delta x.\)

Divide by \(\Delta x\):

\(\displaystyle \frac{\Delta y}{\Delta x} = \big[f'(b)+\varepsilon_2(\Delta u)\big]\big[g'(a)+\varepsilon_1(\Delta x)\big].\)

Take Limits

As \(\Delta x\to 0\), we have \(\Delta u\to 0\), so

\(\varepsilon_1(\Delta x)\to 0\)

and

\(\varepsilon_2(\Delta u)\to 0\).

Therefore,

\(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx} = \lim_{\Delta x\to 0}\frac{\Delta y}{\Delta x} = f'(b)\,g'(a) = f’\!\big(g(a)\big)\,g'(a).\)

Since \(a\) was arbitrary, the formula holds for every \(x\) in the domain. This proves the Chain Rule.

Useful Special Case: Power Rule + Chain Rule

If \(n\) is any real number and \(u=g(x)\) is differentiable, then

\(\displaystyle \frac{d}{dx}\big(u^n\big) = n\,u^{\,n-1}\,\frac{du}{dx} = n\,[g(x)]^{\,n-1}\,g'(x).\)

Worked Examples

Example 1: A Root of a Quadratic

Let \(F(x)=\sqrt{x^2+3}\). Write \(u=x^2+3\), so \(F(x)=u^{1/2}\). Then

\(F'(x)=\displaystyle \frac{1}{2}\,u^{-1/2}\cdot \frac{du}{dx} = \frac{1}{2\sqrt{u}}\cdot 2x = \displaystyle \frac{x}{\sqrt{x^2+3}}.\)

Chain Rule. Red is the original
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Example 2: Sine of a Square

Differentiate \(y=\sin(x^2-5)\). Take \(u=x^2-5\).

\(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx}=\cos(u)\cdot \frac{du}{dx} =\cos(x^2-5)\cdot 2x =2x\cos(x^2-5).\)

Chain Rule. Red is the original
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Example 3: Squared Sine

Differentiate \(y=\big(\sin 2x\big)^2\).

View it as outer \((\cdot)^2\) and inner \(\sin(2x)\):

\(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx} =2\sin(2x)\cdot \frac{d}{dx}[\sin(2x)] =2\sin(2x)\cdot \cos(2x)\cdot 2 =4\sin(2x)\cos(2x).\)

(Equivalently, \(y’ = 2\sin(2x)\cos(2x)=\sin(4x)\) by a trig identity.)

Chain Rule. Red is the original
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Example 4: A Quotient Inside a Power

Let \(g(t)=\left(\displaystyle\frac{t+1}{3t-2}\right)^{7}\). Then

\(g'(t) =7\left(\displaystyle\frac{t+1}{3t-2}\right)^{6} \cdot \displaystyle\frac{d}{dt}\!\left(\displaystyle\frac{t+1}{3t-2}\right) =7\left(\displaystyle\frac{t+1}{3t-2}\right)^{6} \cdot \displaystyle\frac{(3t-2)\cdot 1-(t+1)\cdot 3}{(3t-2)^2}\)

\(\quad =7\left(\displaystyle\frac{t+1}{3t-2}\right)^{6} \cdot \displaystyle\frac{3t-2-3t-3}{(3t-2)^2} = -\,\displaystyle\frac{35}{(3t-2)^{\,8}}\,(t+1)^{6}.\)

Chain Rule. Red is the original
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Example 5: Product + Chain

Differentiate \(y=(x-1)^{4}\,(x^3+2)^{5}\). Use the Product Rule and then the Chain Rule:

\(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx} =(x-1)^{4}\cdot 5(x^3+2)^{4}\cdot 3x^{2} +(x^3+2)^{5}\cdot 4(x-1)^{3}.\)

You may factor \((x-1)^{3}(x^3+2)^{4}\) for a cleaner final form if desired.

Chain Rule. Red is the original
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Example 6: Exponential of a Trig Function

Differentiate \(y=e^{\cos(3x)}\).

\(\displaystyle \frac{dy}{dx} =e^{\cos(3x)}\cdot \frac{d}{dx}[\cos(3x)] =e^{\cos(3x)}\cdot (-\sin(3x))\cdot 3 =-3e^{\cos(3x)}\sin(3x).\)

Chain Rule. Red is the original
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Example 7: Two Links in the Chain

If \(f(x)=\sin(\cos(x^2))\), then

\(f'(x)=\cos(\cos(x^2))\cdot \frac{d}{dx}[\cos(x^2)] =\cos(\cos(x^2))\cdot\big(-\sin(x^2)\big)\cdot 2x =-2x\,\cos(\cos(x^2))\,\sin(x^2).\)

Chain Rule. Red is the original
Created with Desmos

Common Pitfalls

  • Forgetting to multiply by the inner derivative. Every outer differentiation must be followed by the derivative of the inside.
  • Evaluating at the wrong place. In \(f'(g(x))\), the outer derivative is computed at \(u=g(x)\), not at \(x\).
  • Product vs. chain. If factors are multiplied (not composed), apply the Product Rule first, then the Chain Rule to each factor as needed.

Takeaway

The Chain Rule turns complicated compositions into manageable steps: differentiate the outer, keep the inside unchanged, and multiply by the derivative of the inner. Mastering this pattern unlocks derivatives across algebraic, trigonometric, exponential, and logarithmic families.

See more in: Wikipedia, Khan Academy, and MIT OCW.

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