Factoring by Grouping.

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Presentation transcript:

Factoring by Grouping

Sometimes when looking for the greatest common factor, you may find that it is 1. 18a5b2 + 21a7 + 14b6 GCF of 18, 21 and 14 is 1 Not all terms have the variable a so it is not common to all terms Not all terms have the variable b so it is not common to all terms GCF = 1 Factors: 1 (18a5b2 + 21a7 + 14b6 ) There is no point in removing a common factor of 1.

Sometimes when you find that the GCF is 1, there are other ways to find factors of the polynomial. However, whenever you have to factor a polynomial, you must at least determine if there is a GCF and remove it if there is. When the GCF is 1, one of the other methods that you may use to factor a polynomial is grouping as with this next example. ab + bc + ad + cd The GCF of the numerical coefficients is 1, not all terms have the variable a, variable b, variable c nor variable d. That means there is no point in removing a GCF from each term. In this case, we can separate the terms of the polynomial into 2 groups. ab + bc GROUP 1 + ad + cd GROUP 2

‘a + c’ is a common factor in both terms. b(a + c) + d(a + c) ab + bc GROUP 1 + ad + cd GROUP 2 Instead of searching for a common factor for all 4 terms we can search for the GCF of each group. ab + bc GROUP 1 b(a + c) GROUP 1 The GCF for group 1 is b. ad + cd GROUP 2 d(a + c) GROUP 2 The GCF for group 1 is d. ab + bc + ad + cd = + b(a + c) d(a + c) = b(a + c) + d(a + c) Notice that the leftover factors for each group are the same ‘a + c’. Also each of the factored groups is now a term of the expression and we would say that it has only 2 terms (instead of 4) in its transformed state. Those 2 terms have a common binomial factor. ‘a + c’ is a common factor in both terms. b(a + c) + d(a + c)

We can now factor this transformed polynomial by dividing each term by the GCF of a + c. d(a + c) TERM 2 + b(a + c) TERM 1 GCF = a + c b (a + c) + d (a + c) = (a + c) (b + d) Review of the steps: ab + bc + ad + cd ab + bc + ad + cd = b (a + c) + d (a + c) = = (a + c) (b + d)

bx + 2x + ab + 2a Example 2: bx + 2x + ab + 2a GROUP 1 + ab + 2a GROUP 2 The GCF for group 1 is x. The GCF for group 2 is a. x(b + 2) GROUP 1 a(b + 2) GROUP 2 The 2 terms (instead of 4) of the transformed state of the polynomial have a common binomial factor. That factor (GCF) is b + 2. bx + 2x + ab + 2a = x(b + 2) + a(b + 2) = x(b + 2) + a(b + 2) = (b + 2) (x + a)

We can write these binomials either way. x2 + ab + ax + bx Example 3: x2 + ab GROUP 1 + ax + bx GROUP 2 The GCF for group 1 is 1. The GCF for group 2 is x. 1(x2 + ab) GROUP 1 x(a + b) GROUP 2 The 2 terms of the polynomial have a different binomial factor. Grouping will not work with the polynomial expressed in this form. However, if we change the order of the terms and try again, it can be made to work. We can switch the second and third terms and retry. + bx x2 + ax + ab + ab + bx x2 + ax + bx + ax + ab x2 + bx + ax + ab x2 + bx + ab x2 + ax (x + a) = (a + x) x2 + ax GROUP 1 + ab + bx GROUP 2 We can write these binomials either way. The GCF for group 1 is x. The GCF for group 2 is b. x(x + a) GROUP 1 b(a + x) GROUP 2

x2 + ab + ax + bx Example 3: x2 + ax + ab + bx x(x + a) + b(a + x) GROUP 1 + ab + bx GROUP 2 x(x + a) GROUP 1 + b(a + x) GROUP 2 The 2 new terms have a common binomial factor. That factor (GCF) is x + a. = x(x + a) + b(a + x) = x(x + a) + b(x + a) = x(x + a) + b(x + a) = (x + a) (x + b) ab - 2ac + 3ad + 4b – 8c + 12d Example 4: The previous examples have all been polynomials with 4 terms but this example has 6 terms. We can make 2 groups of three terms.

Making 2 groups of three terms: ab - 2ac + 3ad + 4b – 8c + 12d Making 2 groups of three terms: To make these 2 groups we must identify some commonality amongst each group of three terms. The first 3 terms contain the variable a and the last 3 terms are all factors of 4 plus each of the last 3 have only 1 variable. Based on this, we can form the 2 groups without changing the order of the terms. ab - 2ac + 3ad GROUP 1 + 4b – 8c + 12d GROUP 2 The GCF for group 1 is a. The GCF for group 2 is 4. a(b - 2c + 3d) GROUP 1 4(b – 2c + 3d) GROUP 2 The leftover terms for each group are identical and can be used as the GCF for the final step of factoring.

ab - 2ac + 3ad + 4b – 8c + 12d The 2 new terms have a common trinomial factor. That factor (GCF) is b – 2c + 3d. = ab - 2ac + 3ad GROUP 1 + 4b – 8c + 12d GROUP 2 = a(b - 2c + 3d) + 4(b – 2c + 3d) = a(b - 2c + 3d) + 4(b – 2c + 3d) = (a + 4) (b - 2c + 3d) When each of the 2 new terms are divided by the common trinomial factor, the leftover terms are a and +4.

The signs for each term are opposite of each other. ac - ad + 4bd – 4bc Example 5: The GCF for all 4 terms is 1. We must try to factor by grouping. We can group the terms containing variable a and the terms containing 4 or variable b. ac - ad GROUP 1 + 4bd – 4bc GROUP 2 The GCF for group 1 is a. a(c – d) a(c – d) + 4b(d – c) The GCF for group 2 is 4b. The leftover terms for each group are not identical and can not be used as the GCF for factoring as they are because: 4b(d – c) (d – c) (c – d)  The signs for each term are opposite of each other. However these terms can be easily be made identical by removing a common factor of –1 out of one of them. -1(c – d) (d – c) = -1(4b)(c – d) 4b(d – c) = -4b(c – d) 4b(d – c) =

= = = = ac - ad + 4bd – 4bc When you switch these terms around, When you switch these terms around, the sign of the factor must change. = ac - ad GROUP 1 + 4bd – 4bc GROUP 2 = a(c – d) + 4b(d – c) = a(c – d) - 4b(c – d) The final step is to remove the common binomial factor. = a(c – d) - 4b(c – d) = (c – d) (a - 4b) When reversing the order of terms of a binomial, it is important to understand the distinction of when to change the sign of the common factor. If the terms are added, there is no need to reverse the sign of the GCF, but if the terms are subtracted, there is a need to reverse the sign of the GCF. -1(c – d) (d – c) = (c + d) (d + c) = -1(3yz - 7x) (7x - 3yz) = (3yz + 7x) (7x + 3yz) =