• Victor
    link
    47
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    How in the hell does anyone f— up so bad they get O(n!²)? 🤯 That’s an insanely quickly-growing graph.

    Curious what the purpose of that algorithm would have been. 😅

    • magic_lobster_party
      link
      fedilink
      367 months ago

      You have two lists of size n. You want to find the permutations of these two lists that minimizes a certain distance function between them.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        27 months ago

        Surely you could implement this via a sorting algorithm? If you can prove the distance function is a metric and both lists contains elements from the same space under that metric, isn’t the answer to sort both?

    • @petersr
      link
      237 months ago

      Let me take a stab at it:

      Problem: Given two list of length n, find what elements the two list have in common. (we assume that there are not duplicates within a single list)

      Naive solution: For each element in the first list, check if it appears in the second.

      Bogo solution: For each permutation of the first list and for each permutation of the second list, check if the first item in each list is the same. If so, report in the output (and make sure to only report it once).

      • Victor
        link
        27 months ago

        lol, you’d really have to go out of your way in this scenario. First implement a way to get every single permutation of a list, then to ahead with the asinine solution. 😆 But yes, nice one! Your imagination is impressive.

      • Victor
        link
        17 months ago

        I guess, yeah, that’ll do it. Although that’d probably be yet one or a few extra factors involving n.