412. Sislovesme < Trending – TIPS >
love[1 … N] // 1‑based indexing where love[i] = j means person i loves person j .
long long ans = 0; // up to N/2 fits in int, but long long is safe for (int i = 1; i <= N; ++i) int j = love[i]; if (i < j && love[j] == i) ++ans; // count each 2‑cycle once cout << ans << '\n'; return 0;
Because a, b is a mutual‑love pair, we have love[a] = b and love[b] = a . Assume without loss of generality that a < b .
From Lemma 1 every increment corresponds to a genuine mutual‑love pair. From Lemma 2 every genuine pair contributes exactly one increment. From Lemma 3 no non‑mutual pair contributes any increment. Therefore the total number of increments equals precisely the number of mutual‑love pairs. ∎ 5️⃣ Complexity analysis Time – The loop visits each of the N people once, performing O(1) work per iteration: O(N) per test case. 412. Sislovesme
Multiple test cases are given. T // number of test cases (1 ≤ T ≤ 20) N // number of people (1 ≤ N ≤ 10^5) love[1] love[2] … love[N] // N integers, 1 ≤ love[i] ≤ N The sum of N over all test cases does not exceed 10^6 . Output For each test case output a single line containing the number of mutual‑love pairs. Sample Input
When the loop later reaches i = b , the first condition fails ( b < a is false), so the pair is counted again. ∎ Lemma 3 If a pair i, j is not a mutual‑love pair, the algorithm never increments mutualPairs for it.
(A classic “mutual‑love” counting problem – often seen on SPOJ, LightOJ, and other online judges) 1️⃣ Problem statement You are given a group of N people, numbered from 1 to N . Each person loves exactly one other person (possibly himself). The love‑relationships are described by an array love[1 … N] // 1‑based indexing where love[i]
import sys
2 4 2 1 4 3 5 2 3 1 5 4
Both limits satisfy the given constraints ( ∑ N ≤ 10⁶ ). Below are clean, production‑ready solutions in C++ (17) and Python 3 . Both follow the algorithm described above and use fast I/O to handle the maximum input size. C++ (GNU‑C++17) #include <bits/stdc++.h> using namespace std; From Lemma 1 every increment corresponds to a
A is an unordered pair i , j ( i ≠ j ) such that
Memory – The array love[1…N] is stored: .
love[i] = j and love[j] = i . Your task is to count how many mutual‑love pairs exist in the given group.