This MCQ module is based on: Sridharacharya’s Square Formula & Extension to Three Numbers
Sridharacharya’s Square Formula & Extension to Three Numbers
This mathematics assessment will be based on: Sridharacharya’s Square Formula & Extension to Three Numbers
Targeting Class 8 level in Algebra, with Basic difficulty.
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Sridharacharya's Square Formula & Extension to Three Numbers
Sridharacharya (750 CE) gave an interesting method to quickly compute the squares of numbers using Identity 1C. Consider the following modified form of this identity:
Why is this identity true? (It is just Identity 1C rearranged.) Now, for example, \(31^2\) can be found by taking \(a=31\) and \(b=1\):
\(31^2 = (31+1)(31-1) + 1^2 = 32 \times 30 + 1 = 960 + 1 = 961\).
\(197^2\) can be found by taking \(a=197, b=3\): \(197^2 = (197+3)(197-3) + 3^2 = 200 \times 194 + 9 = 38800 + 9 = 38809\).
Figure it Out
6.3 Mind the Mistake, Mend the Mistake
We have expanded and simplified some algebraic expressions below to their simplest forms. Check each of the simplifications and say if there is a mistake. If there is a mistake, try to explain what could have gone wrong. Then write the correct expression.
6.4 This Way or That Way — All Ways Lead to the Bay
Observe the pattern in the figure: how many circles are there in Step 1, 2, 3…? How many total circles appear in Step \(k\)? Write an expression for the number of circles in Step \(k\). There are many different interpretations of this pattern.
Many Paths to the Same Expression
There are many ways of interpreting this pattern. Here are some possibilities:
- Method 1: Step \(k\) forms a \((k+1) \times (k+1)\) square of dots with one corner removed: \((k+1)^2 - 1\).
- Method 2: 1 + 2 + … + arranged symmetrically ⇒ \(k^2 + 2k\).
- Method 3: \(3 + 5 + 7 + \ldots\) — a row of extras added each step.
- Method 4: Sum of two triangles plus a middle strip \(= k(k+2)\).
When carried out correctly, all methods lead to the same answer: \(k^2 + 2k\). The expression \(k^2 + 2k\) gives the number of circles in Step \(k\) of this pattern.
Consider the pattern made of square tiles in the picture below
How many square tiles are there in each figure? Step 1: 1; Step 2: 8; Step 3: 16.
Step 4: 24. Step 10: \(8 \times 9 = 72\).
General expression (for \(n \geq 2\)): \((2n-1)^2 - (2n-3)^2 = 8(n-1)\) tiles.
Find the area of the (interior) shaded region in the figure below (all three rectangles have the same dimensions)
Tadang's method: Big square area = \(m^2\). Subtract three rectangles = \(3 \times (m \times n) = 3mn\). Shaded area = \(m^2 - 3mn = m(m-3n)\).
Yusuf's method: Shaded region = square of side \((m-3n)\) plus 3-strips-adjusted \(= (m-3n)m\). By expanding: \((m-3n)m = m^2 - 3mn\). Same answer.
All three rectangles same dimensions — L-shape area
Find the area of the region of the figure with slanting lines in the figure (Fig 1).
Anusha's method: Required area = Area(ABCD) − Area(EFGH) = \(xy - x'y' = xy - x^2\) (using given). Area of EFGH = \(x^2\). So required area = \(xy - x^2\).
Vaishnavi's method: \(QS = y + x + y = x + 2y\). Area of \(PQRS = x(x+2y)\). Required area = \(x(x+2y) - (\text{area of three rectangles}) = x(x+2y) - 3xy\).
Aditya's method: Required area \(=2 \times \frac{(x-y)}{2}\cdot (\text{KM}) = (x-y)\cdot x \cdot ?\) — by expanding, verify all three expressions are equivalent. If \(x=8, y=3\), find the area of the shaded region.
Dashed-region puzzle (p = 6, r = 3.5, s = 9)
Write an expression for the area of the dashed region and substitute the values to get the numerical area. The dashed region is a rectangle of width \(s-r\) and length \(p-r\), adjusted for the overlap: Area = \(p\cdot s - r\cdot s - r\cdot (p - r) = ps - rs - rp + r^2\). Plug in: \(6\cdot 9 - 3.5\cdot 9 - 3.5\cdot 6 + 3.5^2 = 54 - 31.5 - 21 + 12.25 = 13.75\) sq. units.
Fast Multiplications Using the Distributive Property
The distributive property can be used to come up with quick methods of multiplication when certain types of numbers are multiplied.
When one of the numbers is 11, 101, 1001, …
The following multiplications to find the product of a number with 11 in a single step. \(3874 \times 11\). Let us take the first multiplication: \(3874 \times 11 = 3874 \times 10 + 3874 = 38740 + 3874\).
Notice that the digits are being added. That is, the number that has \(d\) in the thousands place, \(c\) in the hundreds place, \(b\) in the tens place and \(a\) in the units place. This becomes:
| Place | Th | H | T | U |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| \(dcba\times 10\) | d | c | b | a · 0 |
| \(dcba \times 1\) | d | c | b · a | |
| Sum | d | c+d | b+c | a+b · a |
This can be used to obtain the product in one line.
Step 1: write 4 on the right. Step 2: 4+7=11, write 1 carry 1. Step 3: 7+8+1=16, write 6 carry 1. Step 4: 8+3+1=12, write 2 carry 1. Step 5: 3+1=4. Result: \(3874 \times 11 = 42614\).
Describe a general rule to multiply a number (of any number of digits) by 11 and write the product in one line
Evaluate (i) \(94 \times 11\), (ii) \(456 \times 11\), (iii) \(5279 \times 11\), (iv) \(4791256 \times 11\).
- \(94 \times 11 = 1034\)
- \(456 \times 11 = 5016\)
- \(5279 \times 11 = 58069\)
- \(4791256 \times 11 = 52703816\)
Can we come up with a similar rule for multiplying a number by 101?
Multiply 3874 by 101: Let us take a 4-digit number \(dcba\), that is, the number that has \(d\) in the thousands place, \(c\) in the hundreds place, \(b\) in the tens place and \(a\) in the units place. This becomes \(dcba \times 101 = dcba \times 100 + dcba \times 1\). Write \(dcba\) shifted two places to the left, and add \(dcba\):
\(3874 \times 101 = 387400 + 3874 = 391274\).
• \(1111\times 101 = 111100 + 1111 = 112211\)
• \(263831 \times 1001 = 263831263831 - \text{no, carefully: } 263831000 + 263831 = 264094831\)
• \(11111 \times 1001 = 11122111\)
• \(9734 \times 99 = 9734\times 100 - 9734 = 973400 - 9734 = 963666\)
• \(23478 \times 999 = 23478000 - 23478 = 23454522\).
Figure it Out
(i) \(46^2\) using Identity 1A for \((a+b)^2\)
(ii) \(397 \times 403\) using Identity 1C for \((a+b)(a-b)\)
(iii) \(91^2\) using Identity 1B for \((a-b)^2\)
(iv) \(43 \times 45\) using Identity 1C for \((a+b)(a-b)\).
(ii) \((400-3)(400+3) = 160000 - 9 = 159991\).
(iii) \((90+1)^2 = 8100 + 180 + 1 = 8281\) — or \((100-9)^2 = 10000-1800+81=8281\).
(iv) Use \((44-1)(44+1) = 44^2 - 1 = 1936 - 1 = 1935\).
(i) \((p-1)(p+11)\)
(ii) \((3a-9b)(3a+9b)\)
(iii) \((-2y+5)(5+y)\)
(iv) \((6x+5y)^2\)
(v) \((4-\frac{1}{3}c)^2\)
(vi) \((7p)(3x)(p+2)\)
(ii) \(9a^2 - 81b^2\).
(iii) \((5-2y)(5+y) = 25 + 5y - 10y - 2y^2 = 25 - 5y - 2y^2\).
(iv) \(36x^2 + 60xy + 25y^2\).
(v) \(16 - \frac{8c}{3} + \frac{c^2}{9}\).
(vi) \(21px(p+2) = 21p^2 x + 42px\).
Identify the appropriate algebraic expression
3. For each statement identify the appropriate algebraic expression(s).
(i) Two more than a square number: \(2 + x^2\) / \(2(x^2)\) / \(x^2 + 2\) / \(2 x^2\) / etc.
(ii) The sum of the squares of two consecutive numbers: \(m^2 + n^2\), \((m+1)^2 + n^2\), \(m^2 + (n+1)^2\), \(m^2 + (m+1)^2\), \(m^2 + (m-1)^2\), \((2m+1)^2 + (2m+2)^2\).
- Consider any 2-by-2 square of numbers in a calendar month, e.g. \(\begin{pmatrix} 4 & 5 \\ 11 & 12 \end{pmatrix}\).
- Find both diagonal products: \(4 \times 12 = 48\); \(5 \times 11 = 55\).
- Difference = \(55 - 48 = 7\). Try another square — you will always get 7.
- Explain using algebra: label the top-left \(a\); then the square is \(\begin{pmatrix} a & a+1 \\ a+7 & a+8 \end{pmatrix}\). Diagonal products: \(a(a+8) = a^2+8a\) and \((a+1)(a+7) = a^2+8a+7\). Difference = 7 for every square!
The result is constant because the two products differ by \((a+1)(a+7) - a(a+8) = 7\), independent of \(a\). This is Identity 1 in action.
Verify which of the following statements are true
- \((k+1)(k+2) - (k+1)(k+3)\) is always 2.
- \((2p+1)(2q+3)\) is an odd number.
- Squares of even numbers are multiples of 4 and squares of odd numbers are 1 more than a multiple of 4.
- \((4k+2)^2 - (4k-2)^2\) is \(16k\).
Number of letters pattern
A number has a remainder of 3 when divided by 7, and another number has a remainder of 1 when divided by 7. What is the remainder when the sum is divided by 7? What about when the difference (first minus second) is divided by 7?
Competency-Based Questions
Assertion–Reason Questions
Reason (R): Grouping \((a+b+c) = (a+b)+c\) and applying \((x+y)^2 = x^2+2xy+y^2\) gives the identity.
Reason (R): Multiplication by 11 equals adding the number to itself shifted one place to the left.
Reason (R): Equal algebraic expressions are identical letter-by-letter.
Frequently Asked Questions — Linear Equations in One Variable
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To solve problems on Part 2 — Factorisation, (a+b+c)² & Multiplication Shortcuts | Class 8 Maths Ch 6 | MyAiSchool, follow the NCERT method: identify the given quantities, choose the relevant formula or theorem, substitute values carefully, and simplify. Class 8 exercises gradually increase in difficulty — start with solved NCERT examples before attempting exercise questions, and always verify your answer by substitution or diagram.
What are the most important formulas for Chapter 6: Linear Equations in One Variable?
The essential formulas of Chapter 6 (Linear Equations in One Variable) are listed in the chapter summary and highlighted throughout the lesson in formula boxes. Memorise them and practise at least 2–3 problems per formula. CBSE board exams frequently test direct application as well as combined use of multiple formulas from this chapter.
Is Part 2 — Factorisation, (a+b+c)² & Multiplication Shortcuts | Class 8 Maths Ch 6 | MyAiSchool important for the Class 8 board exam?
Part 2 — Factorisation, (a+b+c)² & Multiplication Shortcuts | Class 8 Maths Ch 6 | MyAiSchool is part of the NCERT Class 8 Mathematics syllabus and appears in CBSE board exams. Questions typically include short-answer, long-answer, and competency-based items. Review the NCERT examples, exercise questions, and previous-year board problems on this topic to prepare confidently.
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Common mistakes in Part 2 — Factorisation, (a+b+c)² & Multiplication Shortcuts | Class 8 Maths Ch 6 | MyAiSchool include skipping steps, misapplying formulas, sign errors, and losing track of units. Write each step clearly, double-check algebraic manipulations, and re-read the question after solving to verify that your answer matches what was asked.
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End-of-chapter NCERT exercises for Part 2 — Factorisation, (a+b+c)² & Multiplication Shortcuts | Class 8 Maths Ch 6 | MyAiSchool cover all difficulty levels tested in CBSE exams. After completing them, try the examples again without looking at the solutions, attempt the NCERT Exemplar questions for Chapter 6, and solve at least one previous-year board paper to consolidate your understanding.