Stage 8 · Factoring

8.5  Factoring by Grouping

Four terms, no shared factor? Group in pairs, then watch a common bracket appear.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 5 in this lesson: 8.5.3 Pull out the shared bracket

8.5.3 Pull out the shared bracket

Once the bracket matches, treat (x + y) as a single bundle — one object — that both terms carry. It is a common factor just like a number or a letter, so pull it out front exactly the way you pulled out a GCF back in Lesson 8.2. What is left behind is a from the first piece and b from the second:

a(x + y) + b(x + y)  =  (x + y)(a + b)

And there it is: four scattered terms have become one clean product. Reading the rectangle confirms it — the block is a + b tall and x + y wide, so its area is (a + b)(x + y), which is precisely the four terms we started with. Sides times sides equals piece plus piece plus piece plus piece.

🎮 Try itGroup the 2×2 block

Set the four side-lengths a, b, x, y. Watch the rectangle's four pieces (the amber terms) collapse, row by row, into the two teal sides — and read off the factored product.

a
b
x
y

The same routine works with letters and powers, not just clean two-letter products. Watch a cubic fall apart. In x3 + x2 + x + 1, group the first two and the last two: x3 + x2 gives x2(x + 1), and x + 1 gives 1(x + 1) — yes, you deliberately factor out a 1 so the bracket shows. The shared bracket (x + 1) pulls out, leaving (x + 1)(x2 + 1).

Worked example — a cubic with a sign

Factor 2x3 − 6x2 + x − 3.
Group: (2x3 − 6x2) + (x − 3).
Factor each pair: 2x2(x − 3) + 1(x − 3). Pulling out 2x2 from the first pair leaves x − 3; the second pair already is x − 3, so factor a +1 to make the bracket visible.
Pull out the bracket: (x − 3)(2x2 + 1).
Check by expanding: (x − 3)(2x² + 1) = 2x³ + x − 6x² − 3 = 2x³ − 6x² + x − 3 ✓.

🎮 Try itWatch a four-term polynomial group

Step through five worked four-term polynomials. The widget shows the grouping, the factor pulled from each pair, the matching bracket, and the finished product — then re-expands to prove it.

Example
eastmath.com · 8.5 Factoring by Grouping · 8.5.3 Pull out the shared bracket