Proof of the quadratic formula
See Also In Depth Wikipedia article on completing the square
Consider equation ax2+bx+c = 0. What we want to do is
complete the square, that is, get an equation like this:
(...)2 = ...
Divide both parts by a:
Now, if we want to extract a square of a binomial out of here, we
can add to both sides of the
equation:
We did it so that the formula to the left would be a complete
square of an expression:
Slow down here for just one second. This place is crucial for
understanding the discriminant. On the left side, there is a
square of something, on the right, it is a number. As you know, for all real numbers their squares are
non-negative. So if the number to the right happens to be
negative, this means that there is no real value of x that would
satisfy this equation. That's where the discriminant
rule comes from.
Since the roots of equations like y2 = z are
, we have:
This really is the quadratic formula, however, it can be simplified
further just to make it easier:
open the bracket with b/2a squared:
divide and multiply the square root by 2a:
get 2a inside the square root as 4a^2:
use distributive property:
simplify:
get 2a as the common denominator:
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