The symbol for a factorial is the exclamation point (!). For example, 4! = 4*3*2*1 = 24.
an exclamation point !
An exclamation mark after a number is the symbol for the factorial function.
Two ways: 1) 2nd -> 0/Catalog -> 3 -> Enter 2) MATH -> ◄ -> 4
It is 4060.
The symbol for a factorial is the exclamation point (!). For example, 4! = 4*3*2*1 = 24.
an exclamation point !
An exclamation mark after a number is the symbol for the factorial function.
10! and 6! means factorial of 10, and factorial of 6, respectively. You can calculate that on most scientific calculators - or you can multiply all numbers from 1 to 6 for the factorial of 6, and all numbers from 1 to 10 for the factorial of 10.
The exclamation point is the symbol for the factorial function. For integer values of n, n! = 1*2*3*...*n The factorial is critical for calculating numbers of permutations and combinations.
The symbol commonly used to denote factorial is the exclamation point ( ! ). E.g. 1! = 1 2! = 2 3! = 6 4! = 24 5! = 120 x! = x*(x-1)*(x-2)*(x-3)*(x-4)* ... *3*2*1 , where x is an integer.
The value of 9 factorial plus 6 factorial is 363,600
Two ways: 1) 2nd -> 0/Catalog -> 3 -> Enter 2) MATH -> ◄ -> 4
It is 4060.
factorial of -1
An exclamation mark stands for factorial. For instance, if the number is 7!, then that would be 7x6x5x4x3x2x1. =================================================== Factorial means you multiply the integer written by every integer below it until you reach 1. Oddly enough, 0! = 1. There is also a 'factorial' function for non-integral values, called the Gamma function.
It is called the factorial, denoted by the symbol !. For example; 5 factorial would be written as 5! and is equal to 5 x 4 x 3 x 2 x 1 = 120.