Prove polynomial identities and use them to describe numerical relationships.
Standard detail
CCSS.Math.Content.HSA-APR.C.4
Standard
Depth 2Parent ID: 1B0C0A30C44D41018E791172C47CB36DStandard set: High School — Algebra
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- CCSS.Math.Content.HSA-APR.C.4
- List ID
- 4.
- Standard ID
- FBB19FFA56D14584B633941DA2EA2BFB
- ASN identifier
- S2554516
- Subject
- Mathematics (2010-)
- Grades
- 09, 10, 11, 12
- Ancestor IDs
- 1B0C0A30C44D41018E791172C47CB36D63AAFBFAE0334E75AA9F97B391002596
- Exact matches
- Source document
- New Mexico Common Core State Standards for Mathematics (2010)
- License
- CC BY 3.0 US
- Dataset notes
For example, the polynomial identity (x² + y²)2 = (x² — y²)² + (2xy)² can be used to generate Pythagorean triples.