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 4 of 4 in this lesson: 7.6.4 Using the formulas flexibly

7.6.4 Using the formulas flexibly

The real power of these formulas is that a and b can be anything — a variable, a number, or a whole expression. The skill is learning to spot which part is the a and which is the b, and then the formula does the rest. This even works on plain arithmetic, turning ugly multiplications into easy ones you can do in your head.

The trick for mental math is to write each number as a round number plus or minus a little, usually anchored on a nearby multiple of ten or a hundred. Then the formula collapses the work to a couple of squares and a subtraction.

Worked example — a product that is secretly a difference of squares

Compute 102 × 98 in your head.

  1. Notice both numbers sit the same distance from 100: one is 100 + 2, the other 100 − 2. a sum and its matching difference
  2. So this is (100 + 2)(100 − 2) with a = 100, b = 2. difference of squares
  3. Apply = 100² − 2² = 10000 − 4.
  4. Answer: 9996. done in one line
Worked example — a square by the perfect-square formula

Compute 103² in your head.

  1. Write 103 as 100 + 3, so a = 100 and b = 3. round number plus a little
  2. Use + 2ab + = 100² + 2·100·3 + 3².
  3. That is 10000 + 600 + 9. a square, a double product, a square
  4. Answer: 10609.

For a number just under a round one, use the difference form: 99² = (100 − 1)² = 10000 − 200 + 1 = 9801.

The flexible habit

Before reaching for the long method, ask two quick questions. (1) Are these the same two pieces with opposite signs? → difference of squares, answer . (2) Am I squaring a two-piece expression? → perfect square, answer ± 2ab + . If neither fits, fall back on the full term-by-term rule from 7.5.

🎮 Try itThe mental-math cracker

A product or a square appears. Pick which formula fits and name the round number, then reveal the slick one-line computation and check the exact answer.

Problem
Which formula?
eastmath.com · 7.6 Multiplication Formulas: Shortcuts for Faster Work · 7.6.4 Using the formulas flexibly