To factorise the expression (x^2 - x - 6), we need to find two numbers that multiply to (-6) (the constant term) and add to (-1) (the coefficient of the linear term). The numbers (-3) and (2) satisfy these conditions. Therefore, we can write the factorised form as ((x - 3)(x + 2)).
x times x times x times x times x times x = x6
X squared + 7X + 12?
It is: x(x-3) factorized
x(x - 7)
x(x-7)
7x-x2 = x(7-x)
What about it? Factorise it?
x2 + 4x = x(x + 4)
13X squared + 7X + 12
(x + 2)(x + 1)
X2 - 4= (x + 2)(x - 2)===========
x2 - 41 cannot be factorised.