The professor wrote the differential equation f²/f'=1 on the blackboard, and asked the students to solve it.
Everybody started working with the usual methods, except for a kid at the back of the class, who happened to have skipped that material, but was very bright.
Can you solve this equation without any integration?
(In reply to
re: My (cryptic, mysterious, sibylline) Way by Richard)
Giving details is very un-cryptic, un-mysterious, and un-sibylline, but
anyway... I assumed there had to be a MacLaurin series for f(x), and
then equated the
series for f' and f², which allowed me to find the series coefficients,
which produced a well known result: f(x)= 1/(C-x) for constant C.