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 3 of 5 in this lesson: 9.3.3 Reduce while you multiply or divide

9.3.3 Reduce while you multiply or divide

Put the two habits together. Faced with any product or quotient, run the same four-beat routine every time:

BeatDo this
1 · Flipif it’s a ÷, flip the second fraction and make it a ·
2 · Factorfactor every top and every bottom completely
3 · Cancelcancel any factor that appears on a top and a bottom
4 · Multiplymultiply only what survives — that’s your answer
Worked example — the full routine

x²−1x²+4x+4 · x+2x−1

Factor: x²−1 = (x−1)(x+1), and x²+4x+4 = (x+2)². Rewrite:

(x−1)(x+1)(x+2)(x+2) · (x+2)(x−1)

Cancel: the (x−1)’s and one pair of (x+2)’s vanish. What survives:

= x+1x+2

Restrictions: x ≠ −2 and x ≠ 1. (Set each original bottom to 0: x²+4x+4=0 ⟹ x=−2; x−1=0 ⟹ x=1.)

The two classic slips

1. Multiplying out before cancelling. Expand (x−1)(x+1)(x+2) over (x+2)²(x−1) and you’re staring at degree-3 polynomials you’ll have to re-factor. Cancel first, always.

2. Cancelling a term, not a factor. You may only cancel whole factors that multiply the entire top and bottom. In x+1x+2 you cannot “cancel the x’s” — those x’s are tied up in sums, not standing alone as factors.

🎮 Try itEFFORT METER: CANCEL FIRST vs MULTIPLY FIRST
Slide between the two strategies for the same product. See how “multiply first” balloons the polynomials while “cancel first” keeps them tiny — same answer, far less work.
Strategy:
eastmath.com · 9.3 Multiplying, Dividing, and Powers · 9.3.3 Reduce while you multiply or divide