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In this approach, we use a closure to maintain the state across multiple calls to the counter function. The closure lets us keep track of the last counted value between function calls.
Time Complexity: O(1) per call.
Space Complexity: O(1) for maintaining the state.
1public class Counter {
    public static System.Func<int> CreateCounter(int n) {
        return () => n++;
    }
}C# uses a delegate or lambda to preserve the state. The CreateCounter function returns a lambda that captures the variable n, allowing it to be incremented and returned on each call to the lambda.
This approach uses object-oriented programming to keep track of the counter's state across multiple invocations by encapsulating the state within a class instance.
Time Complexity: O(1) per call.
Space Complexity: O(1) for the instance state.
1class Counter {
2    constructor(n) {
3        this.count = n;
4    }
5
6    call() {
7        return this.count++;
8    }
9}JavaScript can use classes to encapsulate the count state. The Counter class's call method returns the current count and updates the internal state.