U Utility Member Joined May 14, 2012 Messages 36 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Jun 7, 2012 #1 y = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 0 = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 I got x = + / - 2, but I'd really like to see how someone else derives their answer. Thanks.
y = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 0 = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 I got x = + / - 2, but I'd really like to see how someone else derives their answer. Thanks.
Carrotsticks Retired Joined Jun 29, 2009 Messages 9,494 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Jun 7, 2012 #2 Utility said: y = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 0 = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 I got x = + / - 2, but I'd really like to see how someone else derives their answer. Thanks. Click to expand... By observation, I can see that you can easily factorise the cubic: And so therefore, there is a single root at x=-2 and a DOUBLE root at x=2.
Utility said: y = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 0 = x^3-2x^2-4x+8 I got x = + / - 2, but I'd really like to see how someone else derives their answer. Thanks. Click to expand... By observation, I can see that you can easily factorise the cubic: And so therefore, there is a single root at x=-2 and a DOUBLE root at x=2.