Factorising is the inverse of expanding brackets. The function machines below demonstrate this. Factorise 6t + 10. To factorise, look for a number which is a factor of both 6 and 10 (that is why it is ...
Simplify \(\frac{3t + 6}{3t}\). The numerator of this fraction will factorise as there is a common factor of 3. This gives \(\frac{3(t + 2)}{3t}\). Now, there is clearly a common factor of 3 between ...
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