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\frac{-x^{3}+6x-4}{2}
Factor out \frac{1}{2}.
\left(x-2\right)\left(-x^{2}-2x+2\right)
Consider -x^{3}+6x-4. By Rational Root Theorem, all rational roots of a polynomial are in the form \frac{p}{q}, where p divides the constant term -4 and q divides the leading coefficient -1. One such root is 2. Factor the polynomial by dividing it by x-2.
\frac{\left(x-2\right)\left(-x^{2}-2x+2\right)}{2}
Rewrite the complete factored expression. Polynomial -x^{2}-2x+2 is not factored since it does not have any rational roots.