Stage 9 · Rational Expressions & Equations

9.3  Multiplying, Dividing, and Powers

Multiply straight across, divide by flipping — and factor first so the work stays small.

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

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 9.3.2 Dividing — keep, change, flip

9.3.2 Dividing — keep, change, flip

Dividing by a fraction means multiplying by its reciprocal — flip it over. Why? Because dividing by CD asks “how many CD’s fit?”, and that’s the same as taking DC of the thing. Three words: keep, change, flip. Keep the first fraction, change ÷ to ·, flip the second:

A B ÷ C D = A B · D C keep · change · flip the 2nd
AB ÷ CD = AB · DC. The C that was on top is now a bottom — and a bottom can’t be 0.
A new restriction appears

When you flip CD into DC, the old numerator C becomes a denominator. So C ≠ 0 joins the no-go list — even though C started life upstairs. Dividing by a fraction quietly forbids the second fraction from being 0. Always read the restrictions off the original problem and the flip.

Worked example

x²−1x ÷ x+1. Keep the first, flip the second to x+1, and factor x²−1 = (x−1)(x+1):

= (x−1)(x+1)x · x·x(x+1) = x(x−1)

The (x+1) cancels and one x kills the lone x on the floor, leaving x(x−1) = x²−x. Restrictions: x ≠ 0 and x ≠ −1 — the −1 coming from the factor we flipped down into a denominator.

🎮 Try itKEEP–CHANGE–FLIP
Press Flip the 2nd to watch the second fraction turn over and the ÷ become a ·. The restriction tracker shows the no-go list growing as the flip drags a numerator down into a denominator.
Problem:
eastmath.com · 9.3 Multiplying, Dividing, and Powers · 9.3.2 Dividing — keep, change, flip