• YOU can help the next generation of students in the community!
    Share your trial papers and notes on our Notes & Resources page

If you could offer some help please (1 Viewer)

BraydenGay

New Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2007
Messages
5
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
Hi, I was just doing past papers today and I came across this loan repayments question. The problem isn't the question itself, it's the solution in the book.

It factorises: (3 x 10^6)(1.12^n) - (4 x 10^6)(1.12^n) + (4 x 10^6)

into: =(1.12^n)[(3 x 10^6)-(4 x 10^6)] + (4 x 10^6)

which is fine, and dandy but then it minuses the two things it factorises and makes:

= (4 x 10^6) - (1 x 10^6)(1.12^n)

and I thought that you couldn't do that. It seems like a fundamental thing I have forgotten, like from back in year 9...

Sorry if this sounds really stupid, rightly so. But i'm really confused. The only thing I can think of is that i'm thinking of factorising algebraic terms like:

x^2 + 2x +3
=(x-3)(x+1)

and that the reason you can't do that same thing is because you can't subtract x by 3 because x is an expression, but you can do it when they're just numbers like in the loan repayments?


thanks
 

munchiecrunchie

Super Member
Joined
Apr 2, 2007
Messages
432
Gender
Female
HSC
2008
or if its easier to visualise it this way,

3 000 000 - 4 000 000 = -1 000 000 = -1 x 10^6
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2007
Messages
1,409
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Yeah if you didn't realise from the two posts above: they're actually expanding the brackets, it's not factorisation. Very good idea to get used to full working out so you don't make mistakes.
 

BraydenGay

New Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2007
Messages
5
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
oh right...

grr i'm such an idiot, I understand what they've done now, thank you all.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top