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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 8.1.5 The shadow of "divides evenly"

8.1.5 The shadow of "divides evenly"

Here is why factors matter so much. If a is a factor of an expression, then that expression is divisible by a — it splits into a equal groups with nothing left over. From a2 + ab = a(a + b) we can read off a division for free: (a2 + ab) ÷ a = a + b. The factor you pulled out is exactly the thing that divides the whole expression evenly.

Geometrically, dividing by a means removing the shared side. The rectangle had height a; strip that height away and what remains is just the width a + b. This is the very seed of the canceling you will do with algebraic fractions in Stage 9: a factor shared by a top and a bottom can be divided out of both.

a² + ab a area = a(a + b) ÷ a strip the shared side a + b (a² + ab) ÷ a = a + b
A factor is a thing that divides evenly. Remove the shared side a from the area a2 + ab and only the width a + b remains. That is the first step of all canceling.
Key idea

"a is a factor of E" and "E is divisible by a" say the same thing. Factoring an expression is exactly finding the pieces it can be divided into with nothing left over.

eastmath.com · 8.1 From Multiplying Out to Taking Apart: What Factoring Means · 8.1.5 The shadow of "divides evenly"