In mathematics, the factorial of a positive integer n, denoted n!, is the product of the positive integers less than or equal to n. For example,
- 5! = 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1 = 120
- 10! = 10 × 9 × 8 × 7 × 6 × 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1 = 3,628,800
Factorials are often used as a simple example when teaching recursion in computer science because they satisfy the following recursive relationship (if n ≥ 1):
- n! = n (n-1)!
- 0! = 1
- 0! is an instance of the empty product, and therefore 1
- it makes the above recursive relation work for n=1
- many identities in combinatorics would not work for zero sizes without this definition
When n is large, n! can be estimated quite accurately using Stirling's approximation
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2 Multifactorials 3 Hyperfactorials 4 Superfactorials 5 References |
The related Gamma function Γ(z) is defined for all complex numbers z except for z = 0, -1, -2, -3, ... It is related to the factorial by the property:
A common related notation is to use multiple exclamation points (!) to denote a multifactorial, the product of integers in steps of two, three, or more.
For example, n!! denotes the double factorial of n, defined recursively by n!! = n (n-2)!! for n > 1 and as 1 for n = 0,1. Thus, (2n)!! = 2nn! and (2n+1)! = (2n+1)!! 2nn!. The double factorial is related to the Gamma function of half-integer order by Γ(n+1/2) = √π (2n-1)!!/2n.
One should be careful not to interpret n!! as the factorial of n!, a much larger number.
The double factorial is the most commonly used variant, but one can similarly define the triple factorial (!!!) and so on. In general, the k-th factorial, denoted by !(k), is defined recursively by: n!(k) = n (n-k)!(k) for n > k-1, n!(k) = n for k > n > 0, and 0!(k) = 1.
Occasionally the hyperfactorial of n is considered. It is written as H(n)
and defined by
The hyperfactorial function is similar to the factorial, but produces larger numbers. The rate of growth of this function, however, is not much larger than a regular factorial.
The superfactorial of n, written as n$ (a factorial sign with an S written over it) has been defined as
Generalization to the Gamma function
when n is any non-negative integer. Multifactorials
Hyperfactorials
E.g. H(4) = 27648.Superfactorials
where the (4) notation denotes the hyper4 operator, or using Knuths up-arrow notation,
References