Proofs of trig identities
Introduction
and are easy to define. I prefer the unit circle definition as it makes these proofs easier to understand. Next, we define some other functions:
Note: I've omitted because it's unnecessary and might clog things up a little.
With a bit of ingenuity, we can create the following diagram:
We can note that the functions are correct by similar triangles.
Pythagorean identities
Pythagorean identities are easy and there's no algebra involved. In fact, the name Pythagorean is a giveaway of what we should do!
The proof here is very straightforward. We use the pythagorean theorem on giving us or .
Same story here. Applying pythagorean to gives us or .
Same. Pythagorean on gives or .
Conclusion
Even though with the first one and the definitions, we can make the rest from algebra, having a geometric meaning is nice when we want to know what it actually means.