Suppose a quadratic equation has the form x^2 + x + c = 0. Show that the constant c must be less than 1/4 in order for the equation to have two real solutions.

Answer:
see explanation
Step-by-step explanation:
Given a quadratic equation in standard form
ax² + bx + c = 0 ( a ≠ 0 )
Then for the equation to have 2 real roots , the discriminant must be greater than zero , that is
b² - 4ac > 0
x² + x + c = 0 ← is in standard form
with a = 1, b = 1, c = c , then
b² - 4ac > 0
1² - (4 × 1 × c) > 0
1 - 4c > 0 ( subtract 1 from both sides )
- 4c > - 1
Divide both sides by - 4, reversing the inequality as a result of dividing by a negative quantity.
c < [tex]\frac{1}{4}[/tex]