question : find the general solution of $(y+ux)u_x+(x+yu)u_y=u^2-1$
$\frac{dx}{dt}=y+ux,\frac{dy}{dt}=x+yu,\frac{du}{dt}=u^2-1$ I dont know how to start. is this quasilinear ?
edit 1: tried
$\frac{\frac{dx}{dt}}{y+ux}=\frac{\frac{dy}{dt}}{x+yu}=\frac{\frac{du}{dt}}{u^2-1}$
$\frac{\frac{dx}{dt}+\frac{dy}{dt}}{x+y+ux+uy}=\frac{\frac{du}{dt}}{u^2-1} $
$\frac{\frac{d(y+x)}{dt}}{x+y}=\frac{\frac{du}{dt}}{u-1}$
$\frac{d(ln(x+y)+ln(u-1))}{dt}=0$ so we have a sltion whose derivative is 0. we need to find another independent solution to optain j(x,y,u)=F(h(x,y,u))
$\frac{\frac{dx}{dt}-\frac{dy}{dt}}{y-x+ux-uy}=\frac{\frac{du}{dt}}{u^2-1} $
$\frac{\frac{d(x-y)}{dt}}{y-x}=\frac{\frac{du}{dt}}{u+1}$
$\frac{d(-ln(x-y)+ln(u+1))}{dt}=0$
hence $ln(x+y) +ln(u-1)=c_1$and $ln(u+1)-ln(x-y)=c_2$ so the solution is in implct from
$ln(x+y) +ln(u-1)=F(ln(u+1)-ln(x-y))$
F is arbitrary
is this approach correct?