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What we want to do with this is we want to apply the shortcut that we learned in "factoring trinomials" video 2, to where you take "c" and find factors of that to equal your "b." So what we are going ...
If \((x \pm h)\) is a factor of a polynomial, then the remainder will be zero. Conversely, if the remainder is zero, then \((x \pm h)\) is a factor. Often, factorising a polynomial requires some ...