Why does

1 - COS2(Squared)
_________________

COS2

= tan2

sloppy way of writing the trig expressions

( when you write tan2, you are asking for the tan(2 radians. What you meant was something like tan^2 Ø
It has to be the sine of something, the cosine of something, or the tangent of something.
anyway .....

(1 - cos^2 Ø)/cos^2 Ø
= sin^2 Ø/cos^2 Ø
= (sinØ/cosØ)^2
= (tanØ)^2
or
tan^2 Ø ............. all by using basic definitions and identities.

Sorry. Don't think I have those keys on this standard keyboard? I could be wrong.

Let me ask. From step 2 to 3 ...
we go from sin / cos squared separately to (sin/cos)2 or times 2 for each? That means the same thing in this case?
We can't just go from step 2 to the last step?
Sin2/Cos2 is tan2?
I'm trying to get this man.

To understand why the expression

(1 - cos^2(x)) / cos^2(x)

is equal to tan^2(x), we need to use the trigonometric identities.

1. The Pythagorean identity states that sin^2(x) + cos^2(x) = 1.

From this identity, we can rearrange it to express sin^2(x) in terms of cos^2(x) as:

sin^2(x) = 1 - cos^2(x)

2. The tangent function is defined as:

tan(x) = sin(x) / cos(x)

Using the previous identity, we can rewrite the numerator of the expression as sin^2(x):

(1 - cos^2(x)) / cos^2(x) = sin^2(x) / cos^2(x)

Now, substituting the definition of the tangent function into this expression:

sin^2(x) / cos^2(x) = (sin(x) / cos(x))^2 = tan^2(x)

Therefore, (1 - cos^2(x)) / cos^2(x) is equal to tan^2(x).