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  1. How to find the factorial of a fraction? - Mathematics Stack …

    Moreover, they start getting the factorial of negative numbers, like $-\frac {1} {2}! = \sqrt {\pi}$ How is this possible? What is the definition of the factorial of a fraction? What about negative …

  2. How do we calculate factorials for numbers with decimal places?

    I was playing with my calculator when I tried $1.5!$. It came out to be $1.32934038817$. Now my question is that isn't factorial for natural numbers only? Like $2!$ is $2\\times1$, but how do …

  3. What does the factorial of a negative number signify?

    So, basically, factorial gives us the arrangements. Now, the question is why do we need to know the factorial of a negative number?, let's say -5. How can we imagine that there are -5 seats, …

  4. $\sum k! = 1! +2! +3! + \cdots - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    45 (Too long for a comment) I don't know if there's a simpler form, but the sum of factorials has certainly been well-studied. In the literature, it is referred to as either the left factorial (though …

  5. factorial - Why does 0! = 1? - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    The theorem that $\binom {n} {k} = \frac {n!} {k! (n-k)!}$ already assumes $0!$ is defined to be $1$. Otherwise this would be restricted to $0 <k < n$. A reason that we do define $0!$ to be …

  6. Is there a way to reverse factorials? - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Is there any way I can 'undo' the factorial operation? JUst like you can do squares and square roots, can you do factorials and factorial roots (for lack of a better term)? Here is an example: 5!...

  7. factorial - Find the sum of the digits in the number 100!

    Interestingly, if you continue summing the digits for any integer factorial larger than or equal to 6, such that you end with a single digit, the answer will always be 9.

  8. Which has a higher order of growth, n! or n^n? [duplicate]

    In our algorithms class, my professor insists that n! has a higher order of growth than n^n. This doesn't make sense to me, when I work through what each expression means. n! = n * (n-1) * …

  9. number theory - What is the highest power of 2 dividing 100 ...

    What is the highest power of 2 dividing 100! This is what I have so far: 50 multiples of 2 25 multiples of 4 12 multiples of 8 6 multiples of 16 3 multiples of 32 1 multiple of 64 EDIT: giv...

  10. What is the practical application of factorials

    It is a valid question to extend the factorial, a function with natural numbers as argument, to larger domains, like real or complex numbers. The gamma function also showed up several times as …