Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
[...] if you can write the LHS as a perfect square, or if you can't spot a factorization of it right away, if and only if the discriminant (or, if b is an even number, 1/4 of it) is zero.
<u>I see it! I see it!</u>
Stare at it for a while. First term is , third term is , we are missing a double product, but we can play with k. For the LHS to be you just need .
<u>I don't see it...</u>
Then number crunching it is. Set the discriminant to 0, solve for k