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Revision as of 16:03, 8 May 2009 editMichael Hardy (talk | contribs)Administrators210,279 edits Deleting nonsense. The trigonometric secant, equal to one over cosine, is NOT what this article is about.← Previous edit Revision as of 16:06, 8 May 2009 edit undoMichael Hardy (talk | contribs)Administrators210,279 edits dablinkNext edit →
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{{dablink|This article is not about the secant function in trigonometry. For that topic, see ].}}


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Revision as of 16:06, 8 May 2009


This article is not about the secant function in trigonometry. For that topic, see Trigonometric function.
Secant line on a circle

A secant line of a curve is a line that (locally) intersects two points on the curve. The word secant comes from the Latin secare, for to cut.

It can be used to approximate the tangent to a curve, at some point P. If the secant to a curve is defined by two points, P and Q, with P fixed and Q variable, as Q approaches P along the curve, the direction of the secant approaches that of the tangent at P, assuming there is just one. As a consequence, one could say that the limit of the secant's slope, or direction, is that of the tangent. In calculus, this idea is the basis of the geometric definition of the derivative. A chord is the portion of a secant that lies within the curve.

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