Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.6  Multiplication Formulas: Shortcuts for Faster Work

Two pattern formulas distilled from polynomial multiplication — and how to wield them fast, forwards.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 4 in this lesson: 7.6.2 The perfect square formula

7.6.2 The perfect square formula

The second pattern is squaring a two-term expression — multiplying a binomial by itself. Take a sum and square it:

(a + b)²  =  (a + b)(a + b)

Expand it the same careful way — every term meets every term — and this time nothing cancels. The four products are a·a, a·b, b·a, and b·b:

=  +  ab  +  ab  +   =  + 2ab +

This time the two middle products have the same sign, so instead of cancelling they combine into 2ab — twice the product of the two pieces. That middle term is the whole story of this formula, and the most common mistake in all of algebra is to forget it.

Perfect square formulas

(a + b)² = + 2ab +

(ab)² = 2ab +

Square the first piece, square the second piece, and glue them together with twice their product in the middle. For a difference, the only thing that flips is the sign of that middle term — the last term, , stays positive because a negative squared is positive.

Watch out — the classic error

(a + b is NOT + . Squaring does not pass through a sum. You must add the middle term 2ab. Quick proof with numbers: (3 + 4)² = 7² = 49, but 3² + 4² = 9 + 16 = 25. The missing piece is exactly 2·3·4 = 24, and 25 + 24 = 49. ✓

Worked example — squaring a difference

Expand (3a − 4)².

  1. This is a difference squared, so use 2ab + with a = 3a, b = 4. name the pieces
  2. First piece squared: (3a)² = 9a2.
  3. Middle term: 2·(3a)·(4) = 24a, and it is subtracted. twice the product
  4. Last piece squared: 4² = 16 (positive).
  5. Put it together: 9a2 − 24a + 16.

Check at a = 2: the inside is 3·2 − 4 = 2, and 2² = 4; the formula gives 9·4 − 24·2 + 16 = 36 − 48 + 16 = 4. ✓

🎮 Try itSquare it — and never lose the middle term

Choose a sum or a difference, set a and b, and watch the three-term answer build. The numeric check compares the formula against squaring the value directly.

Form
a 5
b 3
eastmath.com · 7.6 Multiplication Formulas: Shortcuts for Faster Work · 7.6.2 The perfect square formula