"\frac {dy}{dx} = \frac {\omega^2x}{g}...The first derivative, the result of the differentiation of y with respect to x, was written by Leibniz in the form \frac {dy}{dx}...Leibniz's notation ...is both extremely useful and dangerous. Today, as the concepts of limit and derivative are sufficiently clarified, the use of the notation... need not be dangerous. Yet, the situation was different in the 150 years between the discovery of calculus by Newton and Leibniz and the time of Cauchy. The derivative \frac {dy}{dx} was considered as the ratio of two "infinitely small quanitites", of the infinitesimals dy and dx. ...it greatly facilitated the systematization of the rules of the calculus and gave intuitive meaning to its formulas. Yet this consideration was also obscure... it brought mathematics into disrepute... some of the best minds... such as... Berkeley, complained that calculus is incomprehensible. ...\frac {dy}{dx} is the limit of a ratio of dy to dx... Once we have realized this sufficiently clearly, we may, under certain circumstances, treat \frac {dy}{dx} so as if it were a ratio... and multiply by dx to achieve the separation of variables. We get {dy} = \frac {\omega^2x}{g}xdx"
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_calculus