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May 12th, 2005, 06:54 AM
#1
Thread Starter
Lively Member
HCF and compound expressions
Hi, can someone help please. I would like to know (in detail plz) how to approach the typical problems that follows, as I am not quite sure how to go about starting to solve this. I really need to know an established method about solving things like this.
question :-Find the HCF of
24x^4-2x^3-60x^2-32x and 18x^4-6x^3-39x^2-18x
(note ^ = to the power of)
thanks for any help
Gaz
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May 13th, 2005, 04:32 PM
#2
Hyperactive Member
Re: HCF and compound expressions
First one:
24x4 - 2x3 - 60x2 - 32x
Simple, the highest common factor must be 2x because every number is even, and 2 is the smallest co-efficient that evenly divides into every other coefficient (if it were four, then the highest common factor would be 4x for the same reason), and every component is a multiple of x:
2x × (12x3 - x2 - 30x - 16)
Second one:
18x4 - 6x3 - 39x2 - 18x
Every co-efficient is a multiple of three. Had 39x2 been 36x2, every co-efficient would have been a multiple of 6. The highest common factor, therefore is 3x, because 3 is the highest common factor of all coefficients, and every component is a multiple of x:
3x × (6x3 - 2x2 - 13x - 6)
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May 14th, 2005, 04:29 AM
#3
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May 16th, 2005, 09:54 AM
#4
Thread Starter
Lively Member
Re: HCF and compound expressions
sorry Dream, it's my fault that I didn't make it clear enough, I actually meant the HCF of both equations taken together, the HCF of both of them. Sorry i did not make that clear first time around. The idea being to evaluate the HCF of both equations taken at the same time.
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May 17th, 2005, 02:56 AM
#5
Hyperactive Member
Re: HCF and compound expressions
 Originally Posted by tsd_man
sorry Dream, it's my fault that I didn't make it clear enough, I actually meant the HCF of both equations taken together, the HCF of both of them. Sorry i did not make that clear first time around. The idea being to evaluate the HCF of both equations taken at the same time.
HAHAHA man I'm not terribly thoughtful at times am I... hehehe. Sorry, must have felt like I was treating you like a high schooler...
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Jun 13th, 2005, 04:23 AM
#6
New Member
Re: HCF and compound expressions
Here's a thought... Perhaps the answer to your question is then what's the HCF of the HCFs? The HCF of the first eqn is 2x and that of the second is 3x, so then the common factor between the two answers is x.
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Jun 13th, 2005, 04:41 AM
#7
Fanatic Member
Re: HCF and compound expressions
No, that's not it. You have to use polynomial division.
If you can factorise each expression that makes it trivial too...just write both as the product of polynomials, and see which factors are in common.
sql_lall 
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