Here is the text of the question (EDITED after reply #1):
Simplify the following expression:
If t is not equal to 1/2,
2t-1+ (2t-1)^2
---------------------
2t-1
(A) 2t (B) 2t-1 (C) 2t-2
This is how I solved it:
(2t-1)^2 (because the (2t-1) from both the numerator and denominator cancel out.
This is where I got stuck.
I was going to expand this as I identified it as the square of a difference special product, yielding: 4t^2+4t+1, but that is not one of the answer choices provided.
The solution in the book shows:
1+(2t-1) = 2t
I'm confused about where the 1 comes from. Basically, how do you get from: (2t-1)^2 to 1+(2t-1)