| 
 
 
| Question 107049:  i need help solving these quadratic equations using the quadratic formula.
 2x^2 - 5x = 3
 3x^2 - 2x + 1 = 0
 i am trying to solve for x
 2(x-5)^2 = 3
 and this queston also i have been trying to figure these out fo an hour.
 x^2 + 4x + 4 = 7
 
 Answer by edjones(8007)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! You must get them in the standard form of ax^2+bx+c=0. 2x^2 - 5x = 3
 2x^2-5x-3=0
 a=2, b=-5, c=-3
 .
 2(x-5)^2 = 3
 2(x^2-10x+25)=3
 2x^2-20x+50-3=0
 2x^2-20x+47=0
 .
 x^2 + 4x + 4 = 7
 x^2+4x-3=0
 .
 I'll do two and you can do the rest.
 Ed
 
 
 | Solved by pluggable solver: SOLVE quadratic equation (work shown, graph etc) |  | Quadratic equation  (in our case  ) has the following solutons: 
 
  
 For these solutions to exist, the discriminant
  should not be a negative number. 
 First, we need to compute the discriminant
  :  . 
 Discriminant d=49 is greater than zero. That means that there are two solutions:
  . 
 
  
  
 Quadratic expression
  can be factored: 
  Again, the answer is: 3, -0.5.
Here's your graph:
 
  |  
 
 | Solved by pluggable solver: SOLVE quadratic equation (work shown, graph etc) |  | Quadratic equation  (in our case  ) has the following solutons: 
 
  
 For these solutions to exist, the discriminant
  should not be a negative number. 
 First, we need to compute the discriminant
  :  . 
 Discriminant d=0 is zero! That means that there is only one solution:
  . Expression can be factored:
  
 Again, the answer is: 5, 5.
Here's your graph:
 
  |  
 | 
  
 | 
 |