Rewrite any quadratic in (x − h)² + k form. The trick is one move: half the coefficient of x, square it, then balance. The result hands you the turning point on a plate and turns “exact form” questions into one-liners.
b/2. Use it inside the bracket as (x + b/2)².Example: complete the square on x² + 8x + 3
Final answer: (x + 4)² − 13 · turning point at (−4, −13)
Write x² + 6x + 1 in the form (x − h)² + k.
Write x² − 5x + 2 in completed-square form, then state the turning point.
Write 2x² − 12x + 7 in the form a(x − h)² + k.
Want the theory?
Read the full Quadratic Functions notes for how completing the square links to the quadratic formula, the discriminant, and graph transformations.
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