We call expressions of the form lx^2+mx+n, where x is a pronumeral and l, m and n are numbers, non-monic quadratic trinomials. Unlike monic quadratic trinomials, the coefficient of x^2 is not 1. Consequently we need to change our approach to account for this.
If we say that the factors are px+q and rx+s, then we can expand to get \left(px+q\right)\left(rx+s\right)=prx^2+\left(ps+qr\right)x+qs=lx^2+mx+n. Equating the coefficients gives us three equations: pr=l, ps+qr=m, and qs=n. Finding these four numbers will allow us to factorise the expression.
Factorise: 6x^{2}-26x+24
Factorise the expression by first taking out a common factor: 3x^2-21x-54
An expression of the form lx^2+mx+n is a non-monic quadratic trinomial.
To factorise expressions like this, we find a numbers p, q, r, and s such that pr=l, ps+qr=m, and qs=n.
Then, the factorisation is lx^2+mx+n=\left(px+q\right)\left(rx+s\right).