These results are used in algebra to simplify expressions, solve equations, and factorise quadratics.
Why it’s true (short reason)
Squaring means multiplying by itself.
\((a+b)^2 = (a+b)(a+b)\).
Expand using distributive law: \(a^2 + ab + ab + b^2 = a^2 + 2ab + b^2\).
Similarly, \((a-b)^2 = (a-b)(a-b) = a^2 - ab - ab + b^2 = a^2 - 2ab + b^2\).
Recipe (how to use it)
Identify whether you have \((a+b)^2\) or \((a-b)^2\).
Square the first term: \(a^2\).
Multiply the two terms and double it: \(±2ab\).
Square the last term: \(b^2\).
Write down the result in simplified form.
Spotting it
You use this formula when you see:
A squared bracket, like \((x+3)^2\) or \((2y-5)^2\).
A quadratic in the form \(a^2 ± 2ab + b^2\), which can be factorised back into a square.
Common pairings
Completing the square (turning quadratics into squared brackets).
Factorising perfect square trinomials.
Expanding brackets in algebra and simplification tasks.
Mini examples
\((x+4)^2 = x^2 + 8x + 16\).
\((y-7)^2 = y^2 - 14y + 49\).
Pitfalls
Forgetting the middle term (thinking \((a+b)^2 = a^2+b^2\)).
Getting the sign wrong in \((a-b)^2\).
Not squaring the second term correctly (e.g. \((3)^2=9\), not 6).
Exam strategy
Write out \((a±b)(a±b)\) if unsure.
Check each expansion carefully—three terms should always appear.
Remember symmetry: the first and last terms are squares, the middle term is double the product.
Summary
The binomial squares are key identities in algebra. They simplify expansions, support factorisation, and are a stepping stone towards completing the square and quadratic formula applications.