It is crucial to understand that in a differential equation,
\(y\) is a function, not a fixed number. Depending on the context (Mathematics, Physics, or Engineering), we use different notations to represent the same derivative:
- Lagrange notation: Uses a "prime" symbol (\(y'\)). This is the most common shorthand in Math.
- Leibniz notation: Uses a differential ratio (\(\dfrac{dy}{dt}\) or \(\dfrac{dy}{dx}\)). This explicitly shows which variable we are differentiating with respect to (usually time \(t\) or position \(x\)).
- Functional notation: Explicitly writes \(y(t)\) or \(y(x)\) to remind us that the value depends on the variable.