I asked this question on MSE here.
I recently learned that there are many very large numbers that have been defined, such as $\operatorname{TREE}(3)$ and many others that are too big to be written down.
What made me interested is the idea that there is a function that take some finite and small number like $3$ to an absolute beast of a number.
So I wonder if there is some function with an elementary antiderivative that we know its antiderivative is too large to be written down without any shorthand notation like $\sum\limits_{n \in J} c_n f_n(x)$ st that $J$ is a finite set and $f_n $ is some combinations of elementary functions , although we can write down the function itself.
Or in other words: How complicated can an elementary antiderivative get? Is there some example of such functions (examples of functions with elementary antiderivatives that are too big to be written down, although we can write down the functions themselves)? If not, is there a proof why elementary antiderivatives can't get that complicated?