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Home/ Questions/Q 3361662
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T03:10:47+00:00 2026-05-18T03:10:47+00:00

There are multiple related questions, but I’m looking for a solution specific to my

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There are multiple related questions, but I’m looking for a solution specific to my case. There is an array of (usually) 14 integers. How can I quickly tell if each int appears exactly twice (i.e. there are 7 pairs)? The value range is from 1 to 35. The main aspect here is performance.

For reference, this is my current solution. It was written to resemble the spec as closely as possible and without performance in mind, so I’m certain is can be improved vastly:

var pairs = Array
    .GroupBy (x => x)
    .Where (x => x.Count () == 2)
    .Select (x => x.ToList ())
    .ToList ();
IsSevenPairs = pairs.Count == 7;

Using Linq is optional. I don’t care how, as long as it’s fast 🙂

Edit: There is the special case that an int appears 2n times with n > 1. In this case the check should fail, i.e. there should be 7 distinct pairs.

Edit: Result
I tested Ani’s and Jon’s solutions with tiny modifications and found during multiple benchmark runs in the target app that Ani’s has about twice Jon’s throughput on my machine (some Core 2 Duo on Win7-64). Generating the array of ints already takes about as long as the respective checks, so I’m happy with the result. Thanks, all!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T03:10:48+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 3:10 am

    Clearly, LINQ won’t provide the optimal solution here, although I would improve your current LINQ solution to:

    // checks if sequence consists of items repeated exactly once
    bool isSingleDupSeq = mySeq.GroupBy(num => num)
                               .All(group => group.Count() == 2);
    
    // checks if every item comes with atleast 1 duplicate
    bool isDupSeq = mySeq.GroupBy(num => num)
                         .All(group => group.Count() != 1);
    

    For the specific case you mention (0 – 31), here’s a faster, array-based solution. It doesn’t scale very well when the range of possible numbers is large (use a hashing solution in this case).

    // elements inited to zero because default(int) == 0
    var timesSeenByNum = new int[32];
    
    foreach (int num in myArray)
    {
        if (++timesSeenByNum[num] == 3)
        {
            //quick-reject: number is seen thrice
            return false;
        }
    }
    
    foreach (int timesSeen in timesSeenByNum)
    {
        if (timesSeen == 1)
        {
            // only rejection case not caught so far is
            // if a number is seen exactly once
            return false;
        }
    }
    
    // all good, a number is seen exactly twice or never
    return true;   
    

    EDIT: Fixed bugs as pointed out by Jon Skeet. I should also point out that his algo is smarter and probably faster.

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