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C Program to Find the Roots of a Quadratic Equation
The standard form of a quadratic equation is:
ax2 + bx + c = 0, where
a, b and c are real numbers and
a != 0​

The term b2; - 4ac is known as the discriminant of a quadratic equation. It tells the nature of the roots.

* If the discriminant is greater than 0, the roots are real and different.
* If the discriminant is equal to 0, the roots are real and equal.
* If the discriminant is less than 0, the roots are complex and different.
Program :
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
    double a, b, c, discriminant, root1, root2, realPart, imagPart;
    printf("Enter coefficients a, b and c: ");
    scanf("%lf %lf %lf", &a, &b, &c);

    discriminant = b * b - 4 * a * c;

    // condition for real and different roots
    if (discriminant > 0) {
        root1 = (-b + sqrt(discriminant)) / (2 * a);
        root2 = (-b - sqrt(discriminant)) / (2 * a);
        printf("root1 = %.2lf and root2 = %.2lf", root1, root2);
    }

    // condition for real and equal roots
    else if (discriminant == 0) {
        root1 = root2 = -b / (2 * a);
        printf("root1 = root2 = %.2lf;", root1);
    }

    // if roots are not real
    else {
        realPart = -b / (2 * a);
        imagPart = sqrt(-discriminant) / (2 * a);
        printf("root1 = %.2lf+%.2lfi and root2 = %.2f-%.2fi", realPart, imagPart, realPart, imagPart);
    }

    return 0;
} 
Output :
Enter coefficients a, b and c: 2
5
8
root1 = -1.25+1.56i and root2 = -1.25-1.56i