The distributive law says that for any numbers A, B, and C, A\left(B+C\right)=AB+AC. The reverse of expanding algebraic expressions is called factorising. Factorising an algebraic expression means writing the expression with any common factors between the terms taken outside of the brackets.
It is helpful to find the highest common factor of the coefficients before we factorise the expression. Otherwise we might end up having to factorise a second time.
Factorise the following expression by taking out the highest common factor:42x-x^2
Factorise the expression -2s-10.
Factorise the following expression: 2t^{2}k^{7}+18 t^{9}k^{9}
We can use the distributive law to factorise an algebraic expression like AB+AC. This means means writing the expression with any common factors between the terms taken outside of the brackets: AB+AC=A(B+C) Factorising is the reverse of expanding.