How do you factor #x^2-5x-14#?

1 Answer
Apr 23, 2015

#(x+a)(x+b)=x^2+(a+b)x+ab#

So we want two number whose product (multiply) is #-14# and whose sum (add) is #-5#.

To get negative 14 when we multiply, we'll have to have one positive and one negative number. Because we want them to add up to a negative sum, we'll need the bigger number (greater absolute value) to be negative.

List of whole numbers we can multiply to get #14#

#1xx14# won't work because #1+(-14) !=0#

#2xx7# will work: #2xx-7 = -14# and #2+(-7) = -5#

Check:

#(x+2)(x-7)# do we get #x^2-5x-14#?

Yes, so we've factored correctly.