I'm interested in evaluating the following integral $ \DeclareMathOperator{\Li}{Li}$
$$ \mathcal{A} = -\int_0^1 \frac{\ln(1-x)}{1+x} \Li_2(x) \, \mathrm{d}x $$
My most successful attempt thus far went like this:
First, converting the dilogarithm to its integral form yields
$$ \mathcal{A} = \int_0^1 \int_0^1 \frac{\ln(1-x) \ln(1-xt) }{t(1+x)} \, \mathrm{d}t \, \mathrm{d}x $$
Interchanging the bounds of integration yields
$$ \mathcal{A} = \int_0^1 \int_0^1 \frac{\ln(1-x) \ln(1-xt) }{t(1+x)} \, \mathrm{d}x \,\mathrm{d}t $$
For the inner integral, we have
$$ \mathfrak{J}(t) = \int_0^1 \frac{ \ln(1-x)\ln(1-xt) }{(1+x)} \, \mathrm{d}x $$
Differentiating under the integral with respect to $t$ and then applying partial fractions yields
$$ \mathfrak{J}'(t) = \frac{1}{1+t} \int_{0}^{1} \frac{\ln(1-x) }{tx-1} \, \mathrm{d}x +\frac{1}{1+t} \int_0^1 \frac{\ln(1-x)}{1+x} \, \mathrm{d}x $$
This evaluates (not) very nicely to
$$ \mathfrak{J}'(t) = \frac{1}{t(1+t) } \Li_2\left(\frac{t}{1-t} \right) +\frac{1}{1+t} \left( \frac{\ln^2(2)}{2} -\frac{\pi^2}{12} \right) $$
This means that our original integral is equivalent to solving
$$ \mathcal{A} = \int_0^1 \int_0^t \frac{1}{at(1+a)} \Li_2 \left(\frac{a}{1-a} \right) \, \mathrm{d}a \, \mathrm{d}t + \left(\frac{\ln^2(2)}{2}-\frac{\pi^2}{12} \right) \int_0^1 \int_0^t \frac{1}{t(1+a)} \, \mathrm{d}a \, \mathrm{d}t $$
The second part of the integral above is trivial, what's giving me trouble is the first part. Any help whatsoever is much appreciated!
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when an actual display would have been even better, and less onerous to you while typing, and you repeatedly used the\tag
command in a way that does not result in any actual tags. (You also repeatedly put not space between f(x) and dx.) $\endgroup$HPL = SpecialFunctions`HarmonicPolyLog; SpecialFunctions`ShuffleProductExpand[HPL[{1}, x] HPL[{2}, x]] /. HPL[{m__}, x] -> HPL[{-1, m}, 1] // Simplify
gives $-3\mathrm{Li}_4(1/2) + 29 \pi^4 / 1440 - \log^4(2) / 8 + \pi^2 \log^2(2) / 24$, which is about 0.577998. $\endgroup$