Thus these two pairs are of dimensionality one.
(1/10)! and (2/10)! are sufficient to express (N/10)! for all N.
(1/12)! and (2/12)! are sufficient to express (N/12)! for all N.
(1/3)! and (1/4)! are sufficient to express (N/12)! for all N.
Thus the three cases above are of dimensionality two.
PROBLEM: Find some order to this dimensionality business.
The reflection and multiplication formulas:
             pi Z
Z! (-Z)! = ---------
           sin(pi Z)
      (N-1)/2  -NZ-1/2
(2 pi)        N        (NZ)! = Z! (Z-1/N)! (Z-2/N)! ... (Z-(N-1)/N)!
On the line:
 4      3      2
X  + F X  + G X  + H X + I  is (as the discriminant of
   2                 2
A X  + B X + C  is  B  - 4 A C):
           4           3      3  3      3  2    2  2  2
     - 27 H  + 18 F G H  - 4 F  H  - 4 G  H  + F  G  H
                   2      2  2         2         3           4      2  3
     + I * [144 G H  - 6 F  H  - 80 F G  H + 18 F  G H + 16 G  - 4 F  G ]
        2                     2        2         4
     + I  * [- 192 F H - 128 G  + 144 F  G - 27 F ]
            3
     - 256 I
 /===\
  ! !                 2
  ! !  (ROOT  - ROOT )   =  square of determinant whose i,j element is
  ! !       i       j
 i < j
    i-1
ROOT    .
    j
 (The discriminant is the lowest degree symmetric function of the
roots which is 0 when any two are equal.)
= X + Y + Z + ...and B is the second symmetric function of N variables
= X Y + X Z + ... + Y Z + ...(B = sum of pairs), then
2 2 2 2 X + Y + Z + ... = A - 2 B. 3 3 3 3 X + Y + Z + ... = A - 3 A B + 3 C. 4 4 4 4 2 2 X + Y + Z + ... = A - 4 A B + 2 B + 4 A C - 4 D.
               /   0                                if I > N
f(I;X,Y,...) = !   1                                if I = 0
               \   X*f(I-1;Y,Z...) + f(I;Y,Z,...)   (N-1 variables)
The generating function is simply
        N
       ====
       \                    I
        >    F(I; X, Y, Z) S  = (1 + S X) (1 + S Y) (1 + S Z) ...
       /
       ====
       I=0
        3        2
F(X) = X  - 3 B X  + C X + D = 0
are
             ------------------------------
            /            ------------------
           / F(B)       / F(B) 2    F'(B) 3
B - K *  3/  ----  +   / [----]  + [-----]
         V    2       V    2          3
             ------------------------------
            /            ------------------
    2      / F(B)       / F(B) 2    F'(B) 3
 - K  *  3/  ----  -   / [----]  + [-----]
         V    2       V    2          3
where K is one of the three cuberoots of 1:1, (-1+sqrt(-3))/2, (-1-sqrt(-3))/2.
4 2 X + B X + C X + D = 0,then 2 X = sqrt(Z1) + sqrt(Z2) + sqrt(Z3), where Z1, Z2, Z3 are roots of
3 2 2 2 Z + 2 B Z + (B - 4 D) Z - C = 0.The choices of square roots must satisfy
sqrt(Z1) sqrt(Z2) sqrt(Z3) = -C.
    3
-4 X  + 3 X - a = 0
is X = sin((arcsin a)/3).In a similar manner, the general quintic can be solved exactly by use of the elliptic modular function and its inverse. See Davis: Intro. to Nonlinear Differential and Integral Equations (Dover), p. 172. Unfortunately, there exists >= 1 typo, since his eqs. (7) and (13) are inconsistent.
Show that all such conformal maps are generated by these operations for any N. If the one-to-one and onto conditions are removed, then for N = 2, conformal maps can be obtained by analytic functions. Show that for N > 2, no new conformal maps exist.