The expression
N!, read as ``
N factorial," denotes the product of the first
N positive integers, where
N is nonnegative. So, for example,
Output
For each integer input, the program should print exactly one line ofoutput. Each line of outputshould contain the value
N, right-justified in columns 1 through 5 withleading blanks, not leadingzeroes. Columns 6 - 9 must contain ``
-> " (space hyphen greater space).Column 10 must contain the single last non-zero digit of
N!.
N | N! |
0 | 1 |
1 | 1 |
2 | 2 |
3 | 6 |
4 | 24 |
5 | 120 |
10 | 3628800 |
For this problem, you are to write a program that can compute the lastnon-zero digit of anyfactorial for (). For example, if your program is asked tocompute the last nonzerodigit of 5!, your program should produce ``2" because 5! = 120, and 2 is the last nonzero digit of 120.
Input
Input to the program is a series of nonnegative integers not exceeding 10000,each on its own linewith no other letters, digits or spaces. For each integer N, you shouldread the value and compute the last nonzero digit of N!.Output
For each integer input, the program should print exactly one line ofoutput. Each line of outputshould contain the value
N, right-justified in columns 1 through 5 withleading blanks, not leadingzeroes. Columns 6 - 9 must contain ``
-> " (space hyphen greater space).Column 10 must contain the single last non-zero digit of
N!.
Sample Input
1 2 26 125 3125 9999
Sample Output
1 -> 1 2 -> 2 26 -> 4 125 -> 8 3125 -> 2 9999 -> 8#include<stdio.h> int main() { int n; while(scanf("%d",&n)!=EOF) { int s=1; for(int i=1;i<=n;i++) { int j=i; while(j%10==0)j/=10; s=s*j; while(s%10==0)s/=10; s=s%100000; } printf("%5d -> %d\n",n,s%10); } return 0; }