It's the general form of a quadratic expression and it can be factored providing its discriminant is not less than zero.
A trinomial of the form ax2 + bx + c is a perfect square if (and only if) b2-4ac = 0 and, in that case, it is factored into a*(x + b/2a)2
2x^2 + 8x + 3 = 0
false apex
x2-5-4x2+3x = 0 -3x2+3x-5 = 0 or as 3x2-3x+5 = 0
0x2 + 1x - 7 = 0
Yes
ax2 + bx +c is an expression, not an equation. It cannot, therefore, have a solution. If the question concerns the equation ax2 + bx + c = 0 then the answer is ax2 - 16ax + 64a = 0 for any a other than 0.
The general form of a quadratic expression is given as ax2+bx+c where "a" cannot equal zero and "b" is the coefficient of the variable "x" and also the sum of the factors of "c" when "a" is unity. Example: x2+5x+6 = (x+2)(x+3) when factored
A trinomial of the form ax2 + bx + c is a perfect square if (and only if) b2-4ac = 0 and, in that case, it is factored into a*(x + b/2a)2
4
A quadratic expression is an expression which is written in the form ax2+bx+c, where a, b, and c represent constants, x represents a variable, and a is not equal to 0.
any number
It is a quadratic function which represents a parabola.
A discriminant that is less than zero.
An expression is quadratic is the equation is in the form ax2 + bx + c. a, b, and c are all constants. They may be different or equal.
Why are Quadratic equations, which are expressed in the form of ax2 + bx + c = 0, where a does not equal 0,
A quadratic equation.