Intermediate

Formulae, Rearranging and Functions

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
A5·A6·A7

Rearranging Formulae — Single Step

Rearranging (or changing the subject of) a formula means isolating a different variable on one side of the equals sign. The same inverse operations used to solve equations apply here.

Golden rule: whatever operation is done to one side must be done to the other.

Single-step examples:

— make the subject:

— make the subject:

— make the subject:

Worked example — make the subject of :

(Take the positive root since is a length.) ✓

Rearranging Formulae — Multi-Step

When the subject appears more than once, or is inside a fraction or root, more steps are required.

Worked example — make the subject of :

Worked example — make the subject of :

Key moves:

  • Multiply through by denominator first
  • Expand brackets
  • Collect all terms containing the subject on one side
  • Factorise the subject out if it appears more than once
  • Divide by the coefficient

Equations vs Identities

An equation is true only for specific values of the variable — it can be solved.

An identity is true for all values of the variable — it cannot be "solved" for a specific value. Identities are written with (the identity symbol).

ExampleTypeWhy
EquationTrue only when
IdentityTrue for all values of
IdentityTrue for all values of
EquationTrue only for specific values ()

Worked example (Higher) — show that .

This shows the difference between consecutive squares is always an odd number.

Algebraic argument — to show two expressions are equivalent, expand and simplify both sides independently until they match. Do not work "across" the equals/identity sign.

Functions — Notation and Evaluation

A function is a rule that maps each input to exactly one output. At GCSE:

Evaluating functions — substitute the given value for :

Common functions:

: ;

Finding given : set up an equation.

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Inverse Functions (Higher)

The inverse function reverses the effect of : if then .

Finding : write , rearrange to make the subject, then write replacing with .

Worked example — find for :

Check: ✓ (applying then returns )

Composite Functions (Higher)

A composite function applies first, then to the result.

Right to left — the function closer to is applied first.

Worked example — given and , find and .

Note: in general — the order matters.

✓; check: ,

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Rearranging — multiplying out too late

When the subject is inside a fraction and also outside (e.g. ), multiply through by the denominator immediately before any other step. Attempting to cancel terms without doing this leads to errors.

2. Confusing equation and identity

An equation has specific solutions; an identity is universally true. Writing when is required loses marks in "show that" questions.

3. — applying first instead of

In , the function written closest to is applied first. So — evaluate first, then substitute into .

4. Inverse function — taking the reciprocal

. The inverse function reverses the rule; is the reciprocal. These are different operations with different results.

MistakeCorrection
"Make the subject of : "Divide both sides by :
" means " — apply to 3 first, then apply to the result
"The inverse of is " (reverse: divide by 5) — not the reciprocal

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