-4

while compiling it i m getting errors error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment fac(0)=1; error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment fac(i)=i*fac(i-1);

#include<stdio.h>


int fac(int i)


{

    int j;

    fac(0)=1;

    fac(i)=i*fac(i-1);


    printf("%d",fac(i));


}

int main()
{

    int x,y;

    printf("enter the number");

    scanf("%d",&x);

    if(x>=0)

    {
        fac(x);
    }


}
1
  • 2
    fac(0)=1; Really? Where did you started to learn C ?
    – Michi
    Jul 15, 2016 at 15:45

3 Answers 3

2

In C, you do not return a function value that way; instead, you would write something like

 if ( i == 1 || i == 0 )
   return 1;

 return i * fac(i - 1);

The problem is that the result of fac(0) does not refer to an object that you can write to; it's like trying to assign a new value to 1 - you can't do it.

0
fac(0)=1;

is not valid c, you don't assign a value for recursion like that.

it seems like you'd want something closer to

if(j==0) {
  return 1;
}


fac(i)=i*fac(i-1);

Same here you can't assign a value to fac(i) because it is a function call.

0
fac(0)=1;

Here fac is a function. fac(0) will return some value (say x). You cannot then assign that returned value to be 1. Not in C at least.

What you are trying to do is to set the function to return 1 when the input is 0.

This can be achieved by

int fac(int i)
{
  int j;
  if (i == 0)
  {
    return 1;
  }
  else
  { 
    return (i*fac(i-1));
  }
  printf("%d",fac(i));
}
1
  • 1
    Note that the printf statement will never be executed in this code.
    – John Bode
    Jul 15, 2016 at 16:15

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