Borrar filtros
Borrar filtros

Hypothetical Factorial Question Solution

2 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Deborah Brooks
Deborah Brooks el 19 de Mayo de 2022
Comentada: Stephen23 el 19 de Mayo de 2022
Hi, I'm new to MATLAB and I'm teaching myself. I have made this code to answer what is the factorial of 'n'. My question is - is it possible to write code that will solve this backwards? i.e. if I'm given 120 can it solve for the answer of 5? Thanks in advance!
n = 5;
nfact = 1;
for i = 1:n
nfact = nfact*i;
end
disp(nfact)
  1 comentario
David Goodmanson
David Goodmanson el 19 de Mayo de 2022
Editada: Torsten el 19 de Mayo de 2022
HI Deborah,
One straightforward way would be: divide by 2. If that result is an integer, divide it by 3. If that result is an integer, divide it by 4 ... keep going until the division either returns 1 somewhere along the line, in which case the starting point was the factorial of the last-used integer, or does not return 1 and returns values less than 1, in which case the starting point was not the factorial of an integer. Programming that up should give you more good practice with Matlab.
If you go this direction you will of course have to check if a number is an integer. Matworks has an 'isinteger' function, but somewhat perversely it does not work for ordinary Matlab double precision numbers. But you can use
floor(n) == n
and if the result is true, n is an integer.

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Respuestas (2)

Chunru
Chunru el 19 de Mayo de 2022
x = 120;
nfact = 1;
for i = 1:x
nfact = nfact*i;
if nfact==x
fprintf("%d = %d!\n", x, i)
break
elseif nfact>x
fprintf('x is not a factorial number. \n')
break;
end
end
120 = 5!
  2 comentarios
the cyclist
the cyclist el 19 de Mayo de 2022
You might want to be careful about floating-point error in the equality check, and instead use something like
tol = 1.e-6;
if abs(nfact-x) < tol
Chunru
Chunru el 19 de Mayo de 2022
This is supposed to be integer operation of factorial.

Iniciar sesión para comentar.


the cyclist
the cyclist el 19 de Mayo de 2022
Editada: the cyclist el 19 de Mayo de 2022
I don't really intend this to be a serious answer to your question, but according to the internet, this formula will work up to N==170.
% Original number
N = 170;
% Factorial of the number
nfact = factorial(N);
% Recover original number
n = round((log(nfact))^((303*nfact^0.000013)/(144*exp(1))) + 203/111 - 1/nthroot(nfact,exp(1)))
n = 170
Looks like this is based on Stirling's approximation.
Also, note that 171! is too large to be represented as double precision in MATLAB:
factorial(170)
ans = 7.2574e+306
factorial(171)
ans = Inf
  1 comentario
Stephen23
Stephen23 el 19 de Mayo de 2022
Even 23! is too large to be accurately represented using the DOUBLE class:
factorial(sym(23))
ans = 
25852016738884976640000
sym(factorial(23))
ans = 
25852016738884978212864

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Categorías

Más información sobre Programming en Help Center y File Exchange.

Etiquetas

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by