Stage 8 · Factoring

8.1  From Multiplying Out to Taking Apart: What Factoring Means

Factoring is multiplication run in reverse — given the area, find the sides.

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

Point 4 of 5 in this lesson: 8.1.4 Factor all the way down

8.1.4 Factor all the way down

When you factor a whole number into primes, you keep going until nothing further breaks apart: you would never stop at 12 = 2 · 6, because 6 still splits into 2·3. The same discipline applies to polynomials: keep pulling out shared pieces until nothing more can come out. A polynomial is fully factored only when every remaining factor is as simple as it can be.

Compare these two ways of writing 2x2 + 4x:

2x(x + 2)  —  fully factored ✓     vs.     2(x2 + 2x)  —  not done ✗

Both are correct equations — expand either and you get 2x2 + 4x. But 2(x2 + 2x) is not finished, because the inside x2 + 2x still has a common x begging to be pulled out. Take it all the way: 2x2 + 4x = 2x(x + 2).

2x² + 4x 2(x² + 2x) ✗ inside still shares an x 2x(x + 2) ✓ fully factored — nothing left to pull
Keep going until nothing more pulls out. 2(x2 + 2x) is a true equation but a half-finished job; the finished answer is 2x(x + 2).
🎮 Try itFully factored, or not done?

Step through five expressions. For each, the checker tells you whether it is fully factored or whether more can still be pulled out — and shows the finished form.

example #
eastmath.com · 8.1 From Multiplying Out to Taking Apart: What Factoring Means · 8.1.4 Factor all the way down