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The derivative of the natural logarithm of a function is equal to the derivative of the function divided by that function. If $f(x)=ln\:a$ (where $a$ is a function of $x$), then $\displaystyle f'(x)=\frac{a'}{a}$
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$\frac{1}{x^2\ln\left(x\right)}\frac{d}{dx}\left(x^2\ln\left(x\right)\right)$
Learn how to solve differential calculus problems step by step online. Find the derivative of ln(x^2ln(x)). The derivative of the natural logarithm of a function is equal to the derivative of the function divided by that function. If f(x)=ln\:a (where a is a function of x), then \displaystyle f'(x)=\frac{a'}{a}. Apply the product rule for differentiation: (f\cdot g)'=f'\cdot g+f\cdot g', where f=x^2 and g=\ln\left(x\right). The power rule for differentiation states that if n is a real number and f(x) = x^n, then f'(x) = nx^{n-1}. The derivative of the natural logarithm of a function is equal to the derivative of the function divided by that function. If f(x)=ln\:a (where a is a function of x), then \displaystyle f'(x)=\frac{a'}{a}.