Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.5  Quadratic Inequalities

Read the answer straight off the parabola: where is the curve above the axis, and where below?

For ages 14–16 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 4 in this lesson: 12.5.2 Roots first, then the intervals

12.5.2 Roots first, then the intervals

You do not always have a graph in front of you, and you do not need one. The same idea becomes a clean four-step routine called the sign chart:

  1. Orient upward. Make sure the coefficient is positive. (More on that in a moment.)
  2. Find the roots. Solve the matching equation — by factoring, or with the quadratic formula from Stage 11. These are the boundary values.
  3. Split and test. The roots slice the number line into pieces. Pick one easy test number in each piece and check the sign of the quadratic there.
  4. Keep the matching pieces. Choose the pieces whose sign matches your relation, and read off the interval.

Run it once on x² − x − 6 < 0. The roots are −2 and 3, which cut the line into three pieces. Test one point in each:

intervaltest xvalue of x²−x−6sign
x < −2x = −39 + 3 − 6 = 6+
−2 < x < 3x = 00 − 0 − 6 = −6
x > 3x = 416 − 4 − 6 = 6+
The signs go +, , + across the three pieces — exactly the shape of an upward valley. For < 0 we keep the middle piece, giving −2 < x < 3.

Now the watch-point in step 1. If the coefficient is negative, the parabola opens downward and "above/below" gets confusing. The fix is the flip rule you met in 12.2 and used in 12.3: multiply the whole inequality by −1 and reverse the symbol. For example,

−x² + x + 6 > 0  ×(−1), flip  ⇒   x² − x − 6 < 0  ⇒  −2 < x < 3.

Same answer, but now you are reading a familiar upward valley instead of a confusing hill. Always orient upward first.

Worked example

Solve x² − x − 6 ≥ 0 (note the ). Same roots, same sign chart; we keep the + pieces, the outside. Because the relation now includes equality, the roots themselves count: at x = −2 and x = 3 the value is exactly 0, which satisfies "≥ 0." So the answer is x ≤ −2 or x ≥ 3 — filled dots at both ends.

🎮 Try it SIGN-CHART BUILDER
Pick a quadratic and a relation. The widget finds the roots, splits the line, prints the +/ sign in each piece, and shades the solution green.
Quadratic
Relation
eastmath.com · 12.5 Quadratic Inequalities · 12.5.2 Roots first, then the intervals