The Quadratic Formula (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE International Maths)
Revision Note
Written by: Mark Curtis
Reviewed by: Dan Finlay
Did this video help you?
Quadratic Formula
What is the quadratic formula?
A quadratic equation has the form ax2 + bx + c = 0 (where a ≠ 0)
you need "= 0" on one side
The quadratic formula is a formula that gives both solutions to a quadratic equation:
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Make sure the quadratic equation has "= 0" on the right-hand side
Otherwise it needs rearranging first
How do I use the quadratic formula to solve a quadratic equation?
Read off the values of a, b and c from the equation
Substitute these into the formula
Write this line of working in the exam
Put brackets around any negative numbers being substituted in
To solve 2x2 - 8x - 3 = 0 using the quadratic formula:
a = 2, b = -8 and c = -3
Type this into a calculator or simplify by hand
Type it once using + for ± then again using - for ±
The solutions are x = 4.3452078... or x = -0.34520787....
To 3 decimal places: x = 4.345 or x = -0.345
To 3 significant figures: x = 4.35 or x = -0.345
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Always look for how the question wants you to leave your final answers
For example, correct to 2 decimal places
How do I write the solutions in an exact (surd) form?
You may be asked to give answers in an exact (surd) form
For example, in a non-calculator paper
In the example above, work out the number under the square root sign
Be careful with negatives!
Now square root this number and use surd rules to simplify
Substitute this back into the formula and simplify
The solutions in exact (surd) form are or
Calculators that can solve quadratics will give solutions in exact (surd) form
What is the discriminant?
The part of the formula under the square root (b2 – 4ac) is called the discriminant
The sign of this value tells you if there are 0, 1 or 2 solutions
If b2 – 4ac > 0 (positive)
then there are 2 different solutions
If b2 – 4ac = 0
then there is only 1 solution
sometimes called "two repeated solutions"
If b2 – 4ac < 0 (negative)
then there are no solutions
If your calculator gives you solutions with terms in, these are "complex" and are not what we are looking for
Interestingly, if b2 – 4ac is a perfect square number ( 1, 4, 9, 16, …) then the quadratic expression could have been factorised!
Worked Example
Use the quadratic formula to find the solutions of the equation 3x2 - 2x - 4 = 0.
Give each solution as an exact value in its simplest form.
Write down the values of a, b and c
a = 3, b = -2, c = -4
Substitute these values into the quadratic formula,
Put brackets around any negative numbers
Simplify the expressions
Simplify the surd
Simplify the fraction
Last updated:
You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week
Sign up now. It’s free!
Did this page help you?