AP Precalculus: Nonlinear Inequalities Formulas & Methods
1. Graph Solutions to Quadratic Inequalities
- Rewrite in standard form: \( ax^2 + bx + c \; {\color{#a33c61}\gtrless} \; 0 \)
- Find roots/zeros: set \( ax^2 + bx + c = 0 \), solve for \( x \)
- Mark roots on number line, test sign in each region (between and outside of roots)
- Shaded regions below x-axis: \( <0 \); above x-axis: \( >0 \)
- Solution intervals: where inequality is true
2. Solve Quadratic Inequalities
- Steps:
- Write inequality: \( ax^2+bx+c\, \gtrless 0 \)
- Set corresponding equation to zero and factor/solve for \( x \)
- Find critical points (roots)
- Test sign of the expression in intervals between/around roots
- Write solution in interval notation
- Example: \( x^2 - 5x + 6 < 0 \)
Roots at \( x = 2, 3 \).
Test intervals \( (-\infty, 2), (2,3), (3, \infty) \)—solution: \( (2,3) \)
3. Graph Solutions to Higher-Degree Inequalities
- Write as \( f(x) \gtrless 0 \) for polynomial \( f(x) \)
- Find all real roots (x-intercepts)
- Divide number line at roots
- Test value in each interval to determine where \( f(x) \) is + or -
- Shade intervals where inequality holds
4. Solve Higher-Degree Inequalities
- Factor \( f(x) \) completely if possible
- Identify multiplicity:
- Even multiplicity: graph touches x-axis, sign does NOT change
- Odd multiplicity: graph crosses, sign does change
- Follow same sign-testing process as quadratic
- Express complete solution in interval notation