Why is (n-1)(n+1)=n^2-1?

Last Updated: 02.07.2025 23:59

Why is (n-1)(n+1)=n^2-1?

The more direct answer is to look at a rectangle with sides of n + 1 and n - 1, let’s go with n = 2

xxx

And you are left with almost a square. One less than the square of side n.

Is using an ambulance really free in countries with universal healthcare, or are there hidden costs like deductibles that people should know about?

xxx

If you cut off the end of that rectangle, you make it smaller, 2 * 3 and a separate nub of size 1 * 2

xxx x

Fossils show colonies of reptiles lived communally 250 million years ago - Phys.org

xxxx

(n - 1)(n + 1)

xxxx

Student Solves a Long-Standing Problem About the Limits of Addition - WIRED

So, that’s a rectangle with sides 2 and 4.

n^2 - n + n - 1

xxx x

Google, Scale AI's largest customer, plans split after Meta deal, sources say - CNBC

Move the nub up to the top:

n^2 - 1

xx

This Is The Most Underrated Supplement That Actually Supports Men's Health - MindBodyGreen

The basic answer is that you cross-multiply the values in each factor: