Apera wrote:
Quadratics typically follow y= ax^2 +bx +c
f(x) = y, so set y to 0.
f(x)=3x^2 - 6x+2
f(x)=3(x^2 - 2x)+2 //subtract 2 and divide by 3
-2/3=x^2 -2x
-2/3=x(x-2)
-2/3=x and -2/3=x-2
That's what I get.
Not only was she not trying to solve it, I really don't know what you're doing here. It can readily be shown that -2/3 is not a zero of this polynomial. If you we're going to solve it, you'd probably still want to complete the square and go from there.
As for the OP, yes, this is a completing the square type problem, which is the usual way to convert ornery quadratics into a squared term plus a constant.
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