Math, asked by kumarkamleshsahu1992, 7 months ago

write reminder theorem​

Answers

Answered by bhavanij0705
2

That is, when you divide by "x – a", your remainder will just be some number. The Remainder Theorem then points out the connection between division and multiplication. For instance, since 12 ÷ 3 = 4, then 4 × 3 = 12. If you get a remainder, you do the multiplication and then add the remainder back in.

Answered by Anonymous
8

Answer:

That is, when you divide by "x – a", your remainder will just be some number. The Remainder Theorem then points out the connection between division and multiplication. For instance, since 12 ÷ 3 = 4, then 4 × 3 = 12. If you get a remainder, you do the multiplication and then add the remainder back in.

Step-by-step explanation:

Example: 2x2−5x−1 divided by x−3

After dividing we get the answer 2x+1, but there is a remainder of 2. Say we divide by a polynomial of degree 1 (such as "x−3") the remainder will have degree 0 (in other words a constant, like "4").

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