How do you factor x^2-2x+1?

1 Answer
Jul 25, 2015

This is a perfect square trinomial:

x^2-2x+1 = (x-1)(x-1) = (x-1)^2

Explanation:

In general, you can recognise these perfect square trinomials, because they take the form a^2+2ab+b^2 = (a+b)^2 or a^2-2ab+b^2 = (a-b)^2

In this particular case, there's a little trick to help spot it:

The coefficients of your quadratic - ignoring the signs - are 1, 2 and 1. Does the sequence 1 2 1 ring any bells? Well 121 = 11*11 = 11^2 and x^2-2x+1 = (x-1)^2, where the coefficients of x-1 - ignoring signs - are 1 and 1.

This works with a few other trinomials, like:

x^2+6x+9 = (x+3)^2 like 169 = 13^2

It only works if the numbers are small enough, but it can help.