{ "data": { "question": { "questionId": "2430", "questionFrontendId": "2354", "boundTopicId": null, "title": "Number of Excellent Pairs", "titleSlug": "number-of-excellent-pairs", "content": "
You are given a 0-indexed positive integer array nums
and a positive integer k
.
A pair of numbers (num1, num2)
is called excellent if the following conditions are satisfied:
num1
and num2
exist in the array nums
.num1 OR num2
and num1 AND num2
is greater than or equal to k
, where OR
is the bitwise OR operation and AND
is the bitwise AND operation.Return the number of distinct excellent pairs.
\n\nTwo pairs (a, b)
and (c, d)
are considered distinct if either a != c
or b != d
. For example, (1, 2)
and (2, 1)
are distinct.
Note that a pair (num1, num2)
such that num1 == num2
can also be excellent if you have at least one occurrence of num1
in the array.
\n
Example 1:
\n\n\nInput: nums = [1,2,3,1], k = 3\nOutput: 5\nExplanation: The excellent pairs are the following:\n- (3, 3). (3 AND 3) and (3 OR 3) are both equal to (11) in binary. The total number of set bits is 2 + 2 = 4, which is greater than or equal to k = 3.\n- (2, 3) and (3, 2). (2 AND 3) is equal to (10) in binary, and (2 OR 3) is equal to (11) in binary. The total number of set bits is 1 + 2 = 3.\n- (1, 3) and (3, 1). (1 AND 3) is equal to (01) in binary, and (1 OR 3) is equal to (11) in binary. The total number of set bits is 1 + 2 = 3.\nSo the number of excellent pairs is 5.\n\n
Example 2:
\n\n\nInput: nums = [5,1,1], k = 10\nOutput: 0\nExplanation: There are no excellent pairs for this array.\n\n\n
\n
Constraints:
\n\n1 <= nums.length <= 105
1 <= nums[i] <= 109
1 <= k <= 60
Compiled with clang 11
using the latest C++ 17 standard.
Your code is compiled with level two optimization (-O2
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Most standard library headers are already included automatically for your convenience.
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Go 1.17.6
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