How can you expand brackets? e.g: (x-4)(x+7)

The answer is of the form ax2+bx+c The a term is found by the product of the coefficients of the x in the brackets. e.g (2x+7)(-4x+6) would give -8x2 . However for this example, we will only use coefficients of 1. The coefficient of the x term (b) will be sum of the numbers after the x (e.g: (6x-4)(4x+3)). For the first bracket the b term is -4 and for the second bracket the b term is +3. The product of these numbers is -1, so this is the coefficient of the x term. The c term in the quadratic is the product of these numbers. Using the previous example, -4 x 3 = -12 so this is the c term. Putting these answers into our quadratic give us x2+3x-28.

Answered by Sam T. Maths tutor

4230 Views

See similar Maths GCSE tutors

Related Maths GCSE answers

All answers ▸

Cylinder A has the volume 8π cm^3 and the height 2 cm. Cylinder B is a similar shape with a volume of 216 cm^3. i) find the linear scale factor. ii) find the surface area of cylinder B


A is the point with coordinates (1, 3) B is the point with coordinates (–2, –1) The line L has equation 3y = 4 – 2x Is line L parallel to AB?


Write 16 × 8^2x as a power of 2 in terms of x


A particle is moving along a straight line. The displacement of the particle from O at time t seconds is s metres where s = 2t^3 – 12t^2 + 7t. Find an expression for the velocity of the particle at time t seconds.


We're here to help

contact us iconContact usWhatsapp logoMessage us on Whatsapptelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

© MyTutorWeb Ltd 2013–2024

Terms & Conditions|Privacy Policy