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The Definition of a Zero Factorial
Because zero has no lower numbers but is still in and of itself a number, there is still but one possible combination of how that data set can be arranged: it cannot. This still counts as one way of arranging it, so by definition, a zero factorial is equal to one, just as 1! is equal to one because there is only a single possible arrangement of this data set.

The Definition of a Zero Factorial
Because zero has no lower numbers but is still in and of itself a number, there is still but one possible combination of how that data set can be arranged: it cannot. This still counts as one way of arranging it, so by definition, a zero factorial is equal to one, just as 1! is equal to one because there is only a single possible arrangement of this data set.
@neverovski neverovski changed the title Update zero factorial Update zero factorial Golang Nov 20, 2019
@egonSchiele egonSchiele merged commit 0a64ea2 into egonSchiele:master Sep 14, 2020
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Thanks! Sorry for the delay.

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