Stage 8 · Factoring

8.4  Cross-Multiplication: Factoring x2 + px + q

Find two numbers that add to the middle and multiply to the end.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
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Point 4 of 5 in this lesson: 8.4.4 Signs decide the pairing

8.4.4 Signs decide the pairing

Before you guess any numbers, read the signs off the trinomial — they cut your search in half. Everything hinges on the sign of the constant q:

Sign of constant qThe two numbers……and the rest
q > 0share a signthat shared sign is the sign of p
q < 0have opposite signsthe bigger-magnitude one takes the sign of p

Why? Because m · n = q. If q is positive, the two numbers must have the same sign (two positives or two negatives), and their sum p then carries that sign. If q is negative, the numbers must have opposite signs; their sum leans toward whichever has the larger magnitude, so that one takes p's sign.

Two worked cases. For x2 − x − 6: the constant is −6, so opposite signs; we need product −6 and sum −1, so the bigger-magnitude number is negative — that's −3 and +2, giving (x − 3)(x + 2). For x2 − 7x + 12: the constant is +12, so same sign, and since p = −7 is negative, both are negative — −3 and −4, giving (x − 3)(x − 4).

Sign trap — match the product first

The most common mistake is to nail the sum and forget the product's sign. In x2 + x − 6 the numbers +2 and −1 sum to +1 but multiply to −2, not −6 — wrong. The correct pair +3 and −2 hits both: sum +1, product −6. Always check the product, not just the sum.

Worked example — opposite signs

Factor x2 + 2x − 15.
Constant −15 → opposite signs; sum +2 → bigger one is positive. Pairs of 15: 1·15, 3·5. We need a difference of 2, so +5 and −3.
Answer: (x + 5)(x − 3). Check: x2 − 3x + 5x − 15 = x2 + 2x − 15 ✓.

eastmath.com · 8.4 Cross-Multiplication: Factoring x2 + px + q · 8.4.4 Signs decide the pairing