We saw how to use the distributive law to expand binomial products. We can also use it to factorise binomial products. In order to find what the factors are, we factorise the terms in pairs.
We can factorise the product of two binomial expressions using the rule: \left(A+B\right) \left(C+D\right)=AC+AD+BC+BD.
There are two special cases of factorising these expressions: \left(A+B\right)^{2}=A^{2}+2AB+B^{2} called a perfect square, and \left(A+B\right) \left(A-B\right)=A^{2}-B^{2} called difference of two squares.
Fully factorise: 5\left(a+b\right) + v\left(a+b\right)
Factorise the following expression: 2x+xz-40y-20yz
Factorise: 121m^{2}-64
We can factorise the product of two binomial expressions using the rule: \left(A+B\right) \left(C+D\right)=AC+AD+BC+BD.
There are two special cases of factorising these expressions:
\left(A+B\right)^{2}=A^{2}+2AB+B^{2} (called a perfect square)
\left(A+B\right) \left(A-B\right)=A^{2}-B^{2} (called a difference of two squares)