Well, the 3u kids could do it easily... not sure about 2u only peeps.I don't think so lol
But for the second one with the power of 6, how would YOU expand it?
One of the questions in my 4u exam required binomial expansion. I tried expanding it like (x^2 + 1)(x^2 + 1)(x^2 + 1)(x^2 + 1)(x^2 + 1)(x^2 + 1) = ...Well, the 3u kids could do it easily... not sure about 2u only peeps.
First one is a polynomial with roots -1, 2, 5Can you fing the primitive function of this without expanding?
(x+1)(x-2)(x-5)
What about this one:
(x^2 +1)^6
They don't learn that in 2u, not for cubics, I believe.First one is a polynomial with roots -1, 2, 5
Integrate.
Well, OP have fun expanding that lol.They don't learn that in 2u, not for cubics, I believe.
Depends, if you can do mental arithmetic fast my way is fairly short, otherwise I'd probs agree with you.I'd argue that manual expansion would be shorter than RealiseNothing's way
Only works for polynomials of degree one, or less.Correct me if i'm wrong, but i believe it goes along the lines of something like this;
(ax+b)^n+1
---------------
a(n+1)
n- power
ax+b - function
a - differentiated form of function
All done without expansion. I'm pretty sure if you check it, you also get the same answer with expansion.