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I have a simple development of an expression that I can not understand how it was made. The expression is:

$\begin{align}\frac{1}{k(k+1)} & = \frac{1}{k} - \frac{1}{k+1} \end{align}$

Can please someones show me how the left side is equal to the right side?

Thank you!

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    Thanks for you answers! Partial fractions are actually introduced later in my book. Still it was good to read up on them!2012-10-25

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When adding two fractions, it is useful to use common denominator.

In your case, $k(k+1)$ is a multiple of both $k$ and $k+1$, so you can write:

$\frac1k-\frac1{k+1}=\frac{k+1}{k(k+1)}-\frac{k}{k(k+1)}=\frac{(k+1)-k}{k(k+1)}=\frac{1}{k(k+1)}.$


A slightly different approach: If you are given $\frac1{k(k+1)}$ and you want to simplify it, you may notice that $\frac{k+1}{k(k+1)}=\frac1k$ and $\frac{k}{k(k+1)}=\frac1{k+1}$ are simpler expressions. So you can ask whether you can somehow write the numerator using $k+1$ and $k$. And you can: $1=(k+1)-k$.

So you get $\frac1{k(k+1)} = \frac{(k+1)-k}{k(k+1)}=\frac{k+1}{k(k+1)}-\frac{k}{k(k+1)}=\frac1k-\frac1{k+1}.$

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    Thank you! This was probably the way I was supposed to do it according to my book. Many thanks!2012-10-25
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Recall how fractions are subtracted: $ \frac{a}{b} - \frac{c}{d} = \frac{a \cdot d}{b \cdot d} - \frac{b \cdot c}{b \cdot d} = \frac{a \cdot d- b \cdot c}{b \cdot d} $ In the case at hand $a=c=1$, $b=k+1$ and $d=k$.

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    Thank you for your answer!2012-10-25