A friend of mine set the question $\sin(xy) =\dfrac {dy}{dx}$ but after quite a long time I have made no headway (so far I have tried $v=xy$ and the solving it as a $1$st order differential equations and also differentiating and trying to solve as a second order ($3$rd order makes things even messier). If anyone is able to tell me whether this is doable that would be fantastic!
Edit: he said he had a closed form solution but if there was an infinite sum solution that would also be fine
Edit a lot lot later. It turned out he was trolling me and the equation is not solvable
Firstly, let's assume that you wanted to know if a slightly less intimidating ODE did indeed have a solution, you would firstly need a set of initial conditions say, for $dx/dt = f(x)$, $x(t_0)=x_0$. most times solutions will only exist for specific sets of initial conditions. However, your'e asking if this ODE has an explicit general form using the normal analytical methods. No. It won't be doable. most differential equations won't have an analytical solution, you would most likely have to numerically approximate your answer to this one.