Primitive of Power of Sine of a x over Power of Cosine of a x/Reduction of Power of Cosine

Theorem

 * $\displaystyle \int \frac {\sin^m a x} {\cos^n a x} \ \mathrm d x = \frac {\sin^{m + 1} a x} {a \left({n - 1}\right) \cos^{n - 1} a x} - \frac {m - n + 2} {n - 1} \int \frac {\sin^m a x} {\cos^{n - 2} a x} \ \mathrm d x + C$

Proof
Hence, rearranging:

Also see

 * Primitive of $\dfrac {\cos^m a x} {\sin^n a x}$ : Reduction of $\sin^n$