$8 + 15xy − 12x − 10y $
How would I go about factorizing this? I'm not sure if it is even possible.
$8 + 15xy − 12x − 10y $
How would I go about factorizing this? I'm not sure if it is even possible.
On
Observe that the $15xy$ and $-10y$ terms both have $5y$ as a common factor, so $$ 8 + 15xy - 12x - 10y = (3x-2) 5y + 8 - 12 x $$ Observe that also the $8$ and $-12x$ terms have $-4$ as a common factor, so $$ (3x-2) 5y + 8 - 12 x = (3x-2)5y - (3x-2)4 $$ Then $$ (3x-2)5y - (3x-2)4 = (3x-2)(5y-4) $$
On
If the expression factors at all, its factorization must be of the form $15(x-b)(y-c)$.
Setting $y=0$ in the original equation leaves $8-12x=0$ so the root in $x$ must be $b=\frac{2}{3}\,$. Similarly, setting $x=0$ gives $c=\frac{4}{5}\,$.
Then, the tentative factorization is $15\left(x-\frac{2}{3}\right)\left(y-\frac{4}{5}\right) = (3x-2)(5y-4)\,$.
Since this was derived on the assumption that such a factorization does in fact exist, the result must be verified, and it is indeed easily verified that this is the correct factorization.
On
Though you have already got many answers, but alternately it can be done multiplying and dividing the entire expression by $2$ to simplify it, i.e., $8+15xy-12x-10y = [15xy-10y-12x+8]\times2/2$
$=[\frac{15xy}{2}-5y-6x+4]\times2$
$=[5y(\frac{3x}{2}-1)-2(3x-2)]\times2$
$=[5y(3x-2)-4(3x-2)]$
$=(5y-4)(3x-2)$
On
There is also the possibility of going brute force on it.
$(ax+b)(cy+d)=acxy+adx+bcy+bd$.
Identifying the coefficients to $8+15xy−12x−10y\;$ we get $\begin{cases} bd=8\\ ac=15\\ ad=-12\\ bc=-10\\ \end{cases}$
Notice that $(aqx+bq)(\frac{c}{q}y+\frac{d}{q})=(ax+b)(cy+d)$ so we can fix any of $a,b,c,d$ to a desired value by multiplying by a convenient rational $q$.
Let's have for instance $a=3$ which seems attractive. The system immediately solves to $\begin{cases} a=3\\ b=-2\\ c=5\\ d=-4\\ \end{cases}$
And $(3x-2)(5y-4)$ is the desired factorization.
$$8 + 15xy − 12x − 10y$$
$$=15xy-10y+8-12x$$
$$=5y(3x-2)+8-12x$$
$$=5y(3x-2)+4(2-3x)$$
$$=5y(3x-2)-4(3x-2)$$
$$=(5y-4)(3x-2)$$