asked 123k views
5 votes
What s the factor of (x+3)(x+2)

2 Answers

3 votes
Basically, don't listen to the other guy, he is making up random stuff, report him.
You can solve this just by multiplying by FOIL
Firsts
Outsides
Insides
Lasts
The firsts of (x+3)(x+2) are x and x, so x*x = x^2
The outsides of (x+3)(x+2) are x and 2, so x*2 = 2x
The insides of (x+3)(x+2) are 3 and x, so 3*x = 3x
The lasts of (x+3)(x+2) are 3 and 2, so 3*2 = 6

Add of of that together, x^2 + 2x + 3x + 6
So the answer is: x^2 + 5x + 6
answered
User Nayana Chandran
by
8.2k points
6 votes
Simplifying (x + 3)(x + 2)

Reorder the terms: (3 + x)(x + 2)

Reorder the terms: (3 + x)(2 + x)

Multiply (3 + x) * (2 + x) (3(2 + x) + x(2 + x)) ((2 * 3 + x * 3) + x(2 + x)) ((6 + 3x) + x(2 + x)) (6 + 3x + (2 * x + x * x)) (6 + 3x + (2x + x2))

Combine like terms: 3x + 2x = 5x (6 + 5x + x2)

Factor a trinomial. (3 + x)(2 + x)

Final result:
(3 + x)(2 + x)
answered
User Debashish
by
7.7k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.