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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 8.4.5 When the leading coefficient isn't 1

8.4.5 When the leading coefficient isn't 1

What about ax2 + bx + c when a ≠ 1? The cross still works — you just have two columns to choose. Now you split a across the top of the cross as well as c, and the diagonal products must add to the middle coefficient b.

Take 2x2 + 7x + 3. Split the leading 2 as 2x · x and the constant 3 as 1 · 3. Arrange the cross so the diagonals give 2x·3 = 6x and 1·x = x, summing to 7x — the middle term. So 2x2 + 7x + 3 = (2x + 1)(x + 3).

2x +1 x +3 2x·3 = 6x 1·x = x 6x + x = 7x  ✓ middle term 2x·x = 2x² 1·3 = 3
The two-column cross for (2x + 1)(x + 3). The columns rebuild the ends 2x2 and 3; the diagonals 6x and x add to the middle 7x. The leading coefficient simply rides in the top-left cell.

Two more, the same way. 3x2 − 10x + 8 splits as (3x − 4)(x − 2): diagonals 3x·(−2) = −6x and (−4)·x = −4x sum to −10x ✓. And 6x2 + 11x + 3 = (3x + 1)(2x + 3): diagonals 3x·3 = 9x and 1·2x = 2x sum to 11x ✓.

Worked example — both columns split

Factor 3x2 − 10x + 8.
Constant +8 with negative middle → both numbers negative. Split 3 as 3x · x and 8 as (−4)·(−2).
Diagonals: 3x·(−2) = −6x and (−4)·x = −4x, total −10x ✓.
Answer: (3x − 4)(x − 2).

🎮 Try itBuild a leading-coefficient trinomial

Pick the four pieces of (ax + b)(cx + d). The widget expands them so you can see how a·c lands on x2, b·d on the constant, and the diagonals on the middle term.

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eastmath.com · 8.4 Cross-Multiplication: Factoring x2 + px + q · 8.4.5 When the leading coefficient isn't 1