I Finding Critical Points of a Quartic Function: A Scientific Approach

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I need this solved for x:
y' = 4ax^3 + 3bx^2 + 2cx + d = 0

This is to say, I need the formula for the "critical points" of a Quartic function.
Wikipedia says: "The derivative of a quartic function is a cubic function."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartic_function

And I found the above derivative here:
http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/EMT668/EMAT6680.F99/Glazer/essays/HTML/quartinfsola.html

Any help solving it would be great (it is beyond my ability).
Thanks
 
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No kidding. Tricky is definitely the word for it.

I've previously read and re-read that whole page already, and unfortunately, I'm clueless with any high-level math. So it would be impossible for me to use the general cubic equation as an example for me to do the same math tricks to the above cubic.

I typically Google until I find what I need. Meaning, I need a website to say "this is the formula for XYZ" (and the formula need to be in a form that does not have many Greek letters). Otherwise, I keep searching. It all comes down to: Can I convert it to computer code?

Therefore, any spoon-feeding would be greatly appreciated.
 
If you have no numbers for ##a,b,c,d## then you're stuck with the giant formula I quoted. There is no easy way in this generality.
 
Looking closer at it. That's just crazy.
How can a simple derivative explode into something that big?

I'm just going to "graph" my Quartic's into a data set and then search for highs and lows instead.

Sorry to waste your time.
Thanks anyway.
 
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