How do I factor 5(x+1)^4 - 5?

Strat

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How do I factor 5(x+1)4 - 5?

I need to solve for x where this equation = 0, but I don't know what to do with (x+1)4

If I write it as (x+1)(x+1)(x+1)(x+1), then the zero would at x = -1 but that wouldn't be right.
 
Okay, so you took the first few trivial steps, adding 5 to both sides:

\(\displaystyle 5(x+1)^4-5=0 \implies 5(x+1)^4=5\)

Then dividing both sides by 5:

\(\displaystyle 5(x+1)^4=5 \implies (x+1)^4=1\)

Now, where do you think you'd go from here? Because you have a quartic (4th-degree) polynomial, you know there will be four solutions, but some of them might be complex. Are you concerned with finding all the solutions, or will just the real solutions do?
 
How do I factor 5(x+1)4 - 5?

I need to solve for x where this equation = 0, but I don't know what to do with (x+1)4

If I write it as (x+1)(x+1)(x+1)(x+1), then the zero would at x = -1 but that wouldn't be right.

Can you factorize a2 - b2 ?

Can you factorize m4 - n4 ?
 
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