Rules of logarithms

Rule Notes
Definition \(y=\log_b x\iff x=b^y\) The base is the same
\(b\gt 0;b\neq 1\)
Comparison \(\log_b x=\log_b y\iff x=y\)
Product rule \(\log_b(xy)=\log_b x+\log_b y\) The arguments, not the logarithms, are multiplied
Quotient rule \(\log_b\left(\dfrac{x}{y}\right)=\log_b x-\log_b y\) The arguments, not the logarithms, are divided
Power rule \(\log_b x^n=n\log_b x\)
Change-of-base rule \(\log_b x=\dfrac{\log_a x}{\log_a b}\) The logarithms, not the arguments, are divided.
What is above (\(x\)) remains above,
what is below (\(b\)) remains below
Inverse-function rules \(b^{\log_b x}=x\)
\(\log_b b^x=x\)
Special bases \(\log x=\log_{10} x\) Common logarithm is base 10
\(\ln x=\log_e x\) Natural logarithm
\(e\) is ‘Euler's number’
\(e\approx 2.718281828\)
Special arguments \(\log_b b=1\)
\(\log_b 1=0\)