

There are two important processes in calculus: differentiation and integration. Differentiation refers to the process of finding the derivative of a function, whereas integration is the opposite process of differentiation. Indefinite integral meaning is that when a function f is given, you find a function F in a way that F’ = f. Finding indefinite integrals is an important process when it comes to calculus. It is used as a method for obtaining the area under a curve and for obtaining many physical and electrical equations which scientists and engineers use in their day to day lives. In this article, you would learn about the indefinite integral definition, indefinite integral formulas, and indefinite integral problems.
Indefinite Integral Definition
Indefinite integral refers to an integral that does not have any upper and lower limit.
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Here, f(x) is integrated and is represented by:
\[\int\] f(x) dx = F(x) + C
This is the indefinite integral notation.
Here, with respect to x, the integral of f(x) is given on the R.H.S.
F(x) is termed as antiderivative or primitive
f(x) is called as the integrand
dx is the integrating agent
C is the arbitrary constant of integration
x is called the variable of integration.
Indefinite Integral Formula
For a function f(x), the set of all the antiderivatives are called as the indefinite integrals of the function f(x) that is denoted as:
\[\int\] f(X) dx = F(x) + C
Indefinite Integrals Properties
Given below are some of the properties of indefinite integrals.
Property 1
Integration and differentiation are inverse processes to one another because
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx = f(x)
And
\[\int\] f'(x) dx = F(x) + C
Here, C is any given arbitrary constant.
Proof:
Consider a given function f such that its anti-derivative is noted by F, that is,
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] F(x) = f(x)
Hence,
\[\int\] f(x) dx = F(x) + C
When you differentiate it on both the sides with respect to x, you get
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx = \[\frac{d}{dx}\] (F(x) + C)
Since the derivative of any given constant function is equal to zero, you get
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx = \[\frac{d}{dx}\] (F(x) + C) = f(x)
The derivative of the given function f is denoted by f’(x), and hence,
f'(x)= \[\frac{d}{dx}\] f(x)
Therefore,
\[\int\] f'(x) dx = f(x) + C
where C is the arbitrary constant known as the constant of integration.
Property 2
Two indefinite integrals that have the same derivative have the same family of integrals or curves and hence they are said to be equivalent.
Proof:
Consider two given functions f and g in x in a way that
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx = \[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx
You can also write this as
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx - \[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx= 0
When you integrate on both the sides, you get
\[\int\] f(X) dx - \[\int\] g(x) dx = c
where C is any given real number
From the above equation, you can say that the family of the curves of [ ∫ f(x)dx + c3, c3∈ R] and [ ∫ g(x)dx + c2, c2∈ R] are same. Hence, you can say that, ∫ f(x)dx = ∫ g(x)dx.
Property 3
The integral of the sum of two functions equals the sum of the integrals of the given functions, that is,
\[\int\][f(x) dx + g(x)] dx = \[\int\] f(x)dx + \[\int\] g(x) dx
Proof:
Using the first property of the integrals, you have
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] [f(x) dx + g(x) dx] =f(x) + g(x)...(1)
You also have
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] [f(x) dx + g(x)dx] = \[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] f(x) dx+ \[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] dx = f(x) + g(x)...(2)
Hence, from the equations 1 and 2, you have
\[\int\] [f(X) + g(x)] dx = \[\int\] f(x) dx + \[\int\] g(x) dx
Property 4
For any given real value of p,
\[\int\] pf(x) dx = p\[\int\] f(x) dx
Proof:
From the first property of integrals you can say that
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] \[\int\] pf(x) dx = pf(x)
You also have
\[\frac{d}{dx}\] [ p \[\int\] f(x) dx] = P\[\frac{d}{dx}\]f(x) dx = pf(x)
From the second property of integrals you can say that
\[\int\] pf(x) dx = p \[\int\] f(x) dx
Property 5
For a given finite number of functions f1, f2…. fn and the given real numbers p1, p2…pn,
∫[p1f1(x) + p2f2(x)…. + pnfn(x) ]dx
= p1∫f1(x)dx + p2∫f2(x)dx +…..+ pn∫fn(x)dx
Indefinite Integral Examples
Let us now look at solving indefinite integrals
Example 1
Evaluate the following the indefinite integral.
\[\int\] (3x2 - 6x + 2cosx) dx
Solution:
From the integral properties 1 and 2, you have
I = \[\int\] (3x2 - 6x + 2Cosx) dx = \[\int\] (3x2 dx - \[\int\] 6xdx + \[\int\] 2cosxdx
= 3 \[\int\] x2 dx - 6 \[\int\] xdx + 2 \[\int\] cosxdx
You can evaluate all the three integrals when you use the integration table. This would give you
I = 3\[\frac{x^{3}}{3}\] - 6 \[\frac{x^{2}}{2}\]+ 2 sin x + C
= x2 - 3x2 + 2sin x + c
Example 2
Find the indefinite integral of the following
\[\int\] \[\frac{x+1}{\sqrt{x}}\] dx
Solution:
For the given function, you need to write the integrals in the form of the sum of two different integrals and then calculate each of them separately.
\[\int\] \[\frac{x+1}{\sqrt{x}}\] dx = \[\int\] (\[\frac{x}{\sqrt{x}}\] + \[\frac{x}{\sqrt{x}}\]) dx = \[\int\] ( \[\sqrt{x}\] + \[\frac{x+1}{\sqrt{x}}\]) dx = \[\int\] \[\sqrt{x}\]dx + \[\int\] \[\frac{dx}{\sqrt{x}}\]
= \[\frac{x^{\frac{2}{2}}}{\frac{3}{2}}\] + 2\[\sqrt{x}\] + C = \[\frac{2\sqrt{x^{3}}}{3}\] + 2\[\sqrt{x}\] + C
FAQs on Indefinte Integrals
1. What is the step-by-step process for solving an indefinite integral using the method of substitution as per the NCERT Class 12 syllabus?
To solve an indefinite integral using the method of substitution, follow the correct CBSE-prescribed method:
- Step 1: Identify a part of the integrand, usually a function within another function, and set it equal to u.
- Step 2: Differentiate u with respect to x to find du/dx, and then rearrange to solve for dx in terms of du.
- Step 3: Substitute both u and the expression for dx back into the original integral. The new integral should only contain the variable u.
- Step 4: Integrate the simplified function with respect to u.
- Step 5: Replace u with the original function of x and add the constant of integration, C, to get the final answer.
2. Why is the constant of integration 'C' crucial when finding an indefinite integral, and what does it represent?
The constant of integration 'C' is crucial because the process of integration is the reverse of differentiation. The derivative of any constant is zero (e.g., d/dx (x² + 5) = 2x and d/dx (x² - 10) = 2x). Therefore, when we find an antiderivative F(x) for a function f(x), there are infinitely many possible solutions. The 'C' represents this entire family of functions whose derivatives are f(x). Omitting it provides an incomplete solution as per the NCERT methodology for the 2025-26 session.
3. How do you correctly apply the integration by parts method for a problem from the NCERT textbook?
Integration by parts is used for integrating the product of two functions. The correct method involves these steps:
- Step 1: Identify the two functions in the integrand and choose which to set as 'u' (first function) and 'dv' (second function). A common guideline is the ILATE rule (Inverse, Logarithmic, Algebraic, Trigonometric, Exponential) to select 'u'.
- Step 2: Apply the integration by parts formula: ∫u dv = uv - ∫v du.
- Step 3: To do this, you must differentiate 'u' to find 'du' and integrate 'dv' to find 'v'.
- Step 4: Substitute u, v, and du into the formula and solve the remaining integral, ∫v du.
- Step 5: Remember to add the constant of integration 'C' at the end.
4. How does the choice of 'u' and 'dv' in the integration by parts formula affect the solution process?
The choice of 'u' and 'dv' is the most critical step in solving a problem using integration by parts. A correct choice, typically guided by the ILATE rule, aims to make the new integral (∫v du) simpler than the original. If you choose incorrectly, the new integral might become more complicated, or you might enter a loop where you cannot find a solution. The strategy is to choose 'u' as the function that simplifies upon differentiation.
5. What is the fundamental difference between an antiderivative and an indefinite integral?
The distinction is subtle but important for conceptual clarity. An antiderivative is a single, specific function F(x) whose derivative is f(x). For example, x² is an antiderivative of 2x. An indefinite integral, written as ∫f(x)dx, represents the entire family of all possible antiderivatives. This is why it is expressed as a function plus a constant, F(x) + C, to account for every possible antiderivative.
6. When should a student use the method of partial fractions to find an indefinite integral?
The method of partial fractions is the correct approach for integrating rational functions (a fraction where both the numerator and denominator are polynomials), provided two conditions are met:
- The fraction must be proper, meaning the degree of the numerator is less than the degree of the denominator. If not, you must perform polynomial long division first.
- The denominator can be factorised into linear or quadratic factors.
This method breaks down a complex fraction into a sum of simpler fractions that are easier to integrate individually.
7. How do indefinite integrals differ from definite integrals in the context of the CBSE syllabus?
The key difference lies in their output and meaning:
- An indefinite integral, ∫f(x)dx, gives a general function or a family of functions (F(x) + C) as its result. It is fundamentally an anti-differentiation process.
- A definite integral, ∫ₐᵇ f(x)dx, gives a single numerical value as its result. It represents the algebraic sum of the area under the curve of f(x) from a starting point 'a' to an end point 'b'. This is why the constant of integration 'C' is not present in the final answer for a definite integral, as it gets cancelled out during evaluation.

















