If you have taken calculus in high school, you probably have seen the
idea of an integral, and you may be wondering why we have been talking
about anti-derivatives instead of integrals. The reason is that they're
totally different concepts!
An anti-derivative is a function whose derivative is the original
function.
As we'll see in the next section, an integral is the limit of a
sum, computing a whole quantity as a sum of its pieces:
∫baf(x)dx=limN→∞N∑i=1f(x∗i)Δx.
The reason that the two are frequently confused is because of an important
theorem, called the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, that relates derivatives
and integrals. It says that:
You can get the antiderivatives of f(x) from integrals of f(x), and
You can compute integrals of f(x) from an anti-derivative F(x).
In fact, this theorem is so useful that the main way that we compute
integrals is via anti-derivatives. But they're not the same.
You need anti-derivatives to compute integrals, just as you need the
key to your front door to get into your house … but a key is not a house,
and an anti-derivative is not an integral.