What is Factoring?
Factoring is the reverse of multiplying.
When you expand (x+2)(x+3), you get x2+5x+6.
Factoring asks: given x2+5x+6, can we get back to (x+2)(x+3)?
Why Factor?
Factored form makes some things easy:
- Solving equations: if (x+2)(x+3)=0
- Then either x=−2 or x=−3
- Finding roots: the factors tell you where the polynomial equals zero
Common Factor
The simplest technique. Look for something that divides every term.
6x2 has factors: 2,3,6,x,2x,3x,6x,…
9x has factors: 3,9,x,3x,9x,…
The greatest common factor is 3x. Pull it out:
6x2+9x=3x(2x+3)
Difference of Squares
When you see a2−b2, it factors to (a+b)(a−b).
Why does this work?
Multiply it back:
(a+b)(a−b)=a2−ab+ab−b2=a2−b2 The middle terms cancel out.
Trinomial Factoring
This is the trickiest pattern. For x2+bx+c, find two numbers that:
- Multiply to c
- Add to b
Example: x2+5x+6
We need numbers that multiply to 6 and add to 5.
Try factors of 6: (1,6), (2,3)
- 1+6=7 — no
- 2+3=5 — yes!
So: x2+5x+6=(x+2)(x+3)
Perfect Square Trinomial
Some trinomials are perfect squares in disguise.
The patterns:
a2+2ab+b2=(a+b)2
a2−2ab+b2=(a−b)2
How to spot it:
- First and last terms are perfect squares
- Middle term is 2×first×last
Example: x2+6x+9
- x2 is a perfect square (x)
- 9 is a perfect square (3)
- 6x=2⋅x⋅3 — yes!
So: x2+6x+9=(x+3)2