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I have a 2D matrix of positive real values, stored as follow:
vector<vector<double>> matrix;
Each cell can have a value equal or greater to 0, and this value represents the possibility of the cell to be chosen. In particular, for example, a cell with a value equals to 3 has three times the probability to be chosen compared to a cell with value 1.
I need to select N cells of the matrix (0 <= N <= total number of cells) randomly, but according to their probability to be selected.
How can I do that?
The algorithm should be as fast as possible.
I describe two methods, A and B.
A works in time approximately N * number of cells, and uses space O(log number of cells). It is good when N is small.
B works in time approximately (number of cells + N) * O(log number of cells), and uses space O(number of cells). So, it is good when N is large (or even, 'medium') but uses a lot more memory, in practice it might be slower in some regimes for that reason.
Method A:
The first thing you need to do is normalize the entries. (It's not clear to me if you assume they are normalized or not.) That means, sum all the entries and divide by the sum. (This part is potentially slow, so it's better if you assume or require that it already happened.)
Then you sample like this:
Choose a random [i,j] entry of the matrix (by choosing i,j each uniformly randomly from the range of integers 0 to n-1).
Choose a uniformly random real number p in the range [0, 1].
Check if matrix[i][j] > p. If so, return the pair [i][j]. If not, go back to step 1.
Why does this work? The probability that we end at step 3 with any particular output, is equal to, the probability that [i][j] was selected (this is the same for each entry), times the probality that the number p was small enough. This is proportional to the value matrix[i][j], so the sampling is choosing each entry with the correct proportions. It's also possible that at step 3 we go back to the start -- does that bias things? Basically, no. The reason is, suppose we arbitrarily choose a number k and then consider the distribution of the algorithm, conditioned on stopping exactly after k rounds. Conditioned on the assumption that we stop at the k'th round, no matter what value k we choose, the distribution we sample has to be exactly right by the above argument. Since if we eliminate the case that p is too small, the other possibilities all have their proportions correct. Since the distribution is perfect for each value of k that we might condition on, and the overall distribution (not conditioned on k) is an average of the distributions for each value of k, the overall distribution is perfect also.
If you want to analyze the number of rounds that typically needed in a rigorous way, you can do it by analyzing the probability that we actually stop at step 3 for any particular round. Since the rounds are independent, this is the same for every round, and statistically, it means that the running time of the algorithm is poisson distributed. That means it is tightly concentrated around its mean, and we can determine the mean by knowing that probability.
The probability that we stop at step 3 can be determined by considering the conditional probability that we stop at step 3, given that we chose any particular entry [i][j]. By the formulas for conditional expectation, you get that
Pr[ stop at step 3 ] = sum_{i,j} ( 1/(n^2) * Matrix[i,j] )
Since we assumed the matrix is normalized, this sum reduces to just 1/n^2. So, the expected number of rounds is about n^2 (that is, n^2 up to a constant factor) no matter what the entries in the matrix are. You can't hope to do a lot better than that I think -- that's about the same amount of time it takes to just read all the entries of the matrix, and it's hard to sample from a distribution that you cannot even read all of.
Note: What I described is a way to correctly sample a single element -- to get N elements from one matrix, you can just repeat it N times.
Method B:
Basically you just want to compute a histogram and sample inversely from it, so that you know you get exactly the right distribution. Computing the histogram is expensive, but once you have it, getting samples is cheap and easy.
In C++ it might look like this:
// Make histogram
typedef unsigned int uint;
typedef std::pair<uint, uint> upair;
typedef std::map<double, upair> histogram_type;
histogram_type histogram;
double cumulative = 0.0f;
for (uint i = 0; i < Matrix.size(); ++i) {
for (uint j = 0; j < Matrix[i].size(); ++j) {
cumulative += Matrix[i][j];
histogram[cumulative] = std::make_pair(i,j);
}
}
std::vector<upair> result;
for (uint k = 0; k < N; ++k) {
// Do a sample (this should never repeat... if it does not find a lower bound you could also assert false quite reasonably since it means something is wrong with rand() implementation)
while(1) {
double p = cumulative * rand(); // Or, for best results use std::mt19937 or boost::mt19937 and sample a real in the range [0,1] here.
histogram_type::iterator it = histogram::lower_bound(p);
if (it != histogram.end()) {
result.push_back(it->second);
break;
}
}
}
return result;
Here the time to make the histogram is something like number of cells * O(log number of cells) since inserting into the map takes time O(log n). You need an ordered data structure in order to get cheap lookup N * O(log number of cells) later when you do repeated sampling. Possibly you could choose a more specialized data structure to go faster, but I think there's only limited room for improvement.
Edit: As #Bob__ points out in comments, in method (B) a written there is potentially going to be some error due to floating point round-off if the matrices are quite large, even using type double, at this line:
cumulative += Matrix[i][j];
The problem is that, if cumulative is much larger than Matrix[i][j] beyond what the floating point precision can handle then these each time this statement is executed you may observe significant errors which accumulate to introduce significant inaccuracy.
As he suggests, if that happens, the most straightforward way to fix it is to sort the values Matrix[i][j] first. You could even do this in the general implementation to be safe -- sorting these guys isn't going to take more time asymptotically than you already have anyways.
I'm trying to make two vectors. Where vector1 (total1) is containing some strings and vector2(total2) is containing some random unique numbers(that are between 0 and total1.size() - 1)
I want to make a program that print out total1s strings, but in different order every turn. I don't want to use iterators or something because I want to improve my problem solving capacity.
Here is the specific function that crash the program.
for (unsigned i = 0; i < total1.size();)
{
v1 = rand() % total1.size();
for (unsigned s = 0; s < total1.size(); ++s)
{
if (v1 == total2[s])
;
else
{
total2.push_back(v1);
++i;
}
}
}
I'm very grateful for any help that I can get!
Can I suggest you change of algorithm?. Because, even if your current one is correctly implemented ("s", in your code, must go from 0 to total2.size not total1.size and if element is found, break and generate a new random), it has the following drawback: assume vectors of 1.000.000 elements and you are trying the last random number. You have one probability in 1.000.000 of find a random number not previously used. That is a very small amount.Last but one number has a probability of 2 in 1.000.000 also small. In conclusion, your program will loop and expend lots of CPU resources.
Your best alternative is follow #NathanOliver suggestion and look for function std::shuffle. The manual page shows the implementation algorithm, that is what you are looking for.
Another simple algorithm, with some pros and cons, is:
init total2 with sequence 0,1,2,...,n where n is the size total1 - 1
choice two random numbers, i1 and i2, in range [0,n-1].
Swap elements i1 and i2 in total2.
repeat from (2) a fixed number of times "R".
This method allows to known a priori the necessary steps and to control the level of "randomness" of the final vector (bigger R is more random). However, it is far to be good in its randomness quality.
Another method, better in the probabilistic distribution:
fill a list L with number 0,1,2,...size total1-1.
choice a random number i between 0 and the size of list L - 1 .
Store in total2 the i-th element in list L.
Remove this element from L.
repeat from (2) until L is empty.
If you just want to shuffle vector<string> total1, you can do this without using helping vector<int> total2. Here is an implementation based on Fisher–Yates shuffle.
for(int i=n-1; i>=1; i--) {
int j=rand()%(i+1);
swap(total1[j], total1[i]); // your prof might not allow use of swap:)
}
If you must use vector<int> total2 then shuffle it using above algorithm. Next you can use it to create a new vector<string> result from total1 where result[i]=total1[total2[i]].
Duplicate:
Unique random numbers in O(1)?
I want an pseudo random number generator that can generate numbers with no repeats in a random order.
For example:
random(10)
might return
5, 9, 1, 4, 2, 8, 3, 7, 6, 10
Is there a better way to do it other than making the range of numbers and shuffling them about, or checking the generated list for repeats?
Edit:
Also I want it to be efficient in generating big numbers without the entire range.
Edit:
I see everyone suggesting shuffle algorithms. But if I want to generate large random number (1024 byte+) then that method would take alot more memory than if I just used a regular RNG and inserted into a Set until it was a specified length, right? Is there no better mathematical algorithm for this.
You may be interested in a linear feedback shift register.
We used to build these out of hardware, but I've also done them in software. It uses a shift register with some of the bits xor'ed and fed back to the input, and if you pick just the right "taps" you can get a sequence that's as long as the register size. That is, a 16-bit lfsr can produce a sequence 65535 long with no repeats. It's statistically random but of course eminently repeatable. Also, if it's done wrong, you can get some embarrassingly short sequences. If you look up the lfsr, you will find examples of how to construct them properly (which is to say, "maximal length").
A shuffle is a perfectly good way to do this (provided you do not introduce a bias using the naive algorithm). See Fisher-Yates shuffle.
If a random number is guaranteed to never repeat it is no longer random and the amount of randomness decreases as the numbers are generated (after nine numbers random(10) is rather predictable and even after only eight you have a 50-50 chance).
I understand tou don't want a shuffle for large ranges, since you'd have to store the whole list to do so.
Instead, use a reversible pseudo-random hash. Then feed in the values 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 etc in turn.
There are infinite numbers of hashes like this. They're not too hard to generate if they're restricted to a power of 2, but any base can be used.
Here's one that would work for example if you wanted to go through all 2^32 32 bit values. It's easiest to write because the implicit mod 2^32 of integer math works to your advantage in this case.
unsigned int reversableHash(unsigned int x)
{
x*=0xDEADBEEF;
x=x^(x>>17);
x*=0x01234567;
x+=0x88776655;
x=x^(x>>4);
x=x^(x>>9);
x*=0x91827363;
x=x^(x>>7);
x=x^(x>>11);
x=x^(x>>20);
x*=0x77773333;
return x;
}
If you don't mind mediocre randomness properties and if the number of elements allows it then you could use a linear congruential random number generator.
A shuffle is the best you can do for random numbers in a specific range with no repeats. The reason that the method you describe (randomly generate numbers and put them in a Set until you reach a specified length) is less efficient is because of duplicates. Theoretically, that algorithm might never finish. At best it will finish in an indeterminable amount of time, as compared to a shuffle, which will always run in a highly predictable amount of time.
Response to edits and comments:
If, as you indicate in the comments, the range of numbers is very large and you want to select relatively few of them at random with no repeats, then the likelihood of repeats diminishes rapidly. The bigger the difference in size between the range and the number of selections, the smaller the likelihood of repeat selections, and the better the performance will be for the select-and-check algorithm you describe in the question.
What about using GUID generator (like in the one in .NET). Granted it is not guaranteed that there will be no duplicates, however the chance getting one is pretty low.
This has been asked before - see my answer to the previous question. In a nutshell: You can use a block cipher to generate a secure (random) permutation over any range you want, without having to store the entire permutation at any point.
If you want to creating large (say, 64 bits or greater) random numbers with no repeats, then just create them. If you're using a good random number generator, that actually has enough entropy, then the odds of generating repeats are so miniscule as to not be worth worrying about.
For instance, when generating cryptographic keys, no one actually bothers checking to see if they've generated the same key before; since you're trusting your random number generator that a dedicated attacker won't be able to get the same key out, then why would you expect that you would come up with the same key accidentally?
Of course, if you have a bad random number generator (like the Debian SSL random number generator vulnerability), or are generating small enough numbers that the birthday paradox gives you a high chance of collision, then you will need to actually do something to ensure you don't get repeats. But for large random numbers with a good generator, just trust probability not to give you any repeats.
As you generate your numbers, use a Bloom filter to detect duplicates. This would use a minimal amount of memory. There would be no need to store earlier numbers in the series at all.
The trade off is that your list could not be exhaustive in your range. If your numbers are truly on the order of 256^1024, that's hardly any trade off at all.
(Of course if they are actually random on that scale, even bothering to detect duplicates is a waste of time. If every computer on earth generated a trillion random numbers that size every second for trillions of years, the chance of a collision is still absolutely negligible.)
I second gbarry's answer about using an LFSR. They are very efficient and simple to implement even in software and are guaranteed not to repeat in (2^N - 1) uses for an LFSR with an N-bit shift-register.
There are some drawbacks however: by observing a small number of outputs from the RNG, one can reconstruct the LFSR and predict all values it will generate, making them not usable for cryptography and anywhere were a good RNG is needed. The second problem is that either the all zero word or the all one (in terms of bits) word is invalid depending on the LFSR implementation. The third issue which is relevant to your question is that the maximum number generated by the LFSR is always a power of 2 - 1 (or power of 2 - 2).
The first drawback might not be an issue depending on your application. From the example you gave, it seems that you are not expecting zero to be among the answers; so, the second issue does not seem relevant to your case.
The maximum value (and thus range) problem can solved by reusing the LFSR until you get a number within your range. Here's an example:
Say you want to have numbers between 1 and 10 (as in your example). You would use a 4-bit LFSR which has a range [1, 15] inclusive. Here's a pseudo code as to how to get number in the range [1,10]:
x = LFSR.getRandomNumber();
while (x > 10) {
x = LFSR.getRandomNumber();
}
You should embed the previous code in your RNG; so that the caller wouldn't care about implementation.
Note that this would slow down your RNG if you use a large shift-register and the maximum number you want is not a power of 2 - 1.
This answer suggests some strategies for getting what you want and ensuring they are in a random order using some already well-known algorithms.
There is an inside out version of the Fisher-Yates shuffle algorithm, called the Durstenfeld version, that randomly distributes sequentially acquired items into arrays and collections while loading the array or collection.
One thing to remember is that the Fisher-Yates (AKA Knuth) shuffle or the Durstenfeld version used at load time is highly efficient with arrays of objects because only the reference pointer to the object is being moved and the object itself doesn't have to be examined or compared with any other object as part of the algorithm.
I will give both algorithms further below.
If you want really huge random numbers, on the order of 1024 bytes or more, a really good random generator that can generate unsigned bytes or words at a time will suffice. Randomly generate as many bytes or words as you need to construct the number, make it into an object with a reference pointer to it and, hey presto, you have a really huge random integer. If you need a specific really huge range, you can add a base value of zero bytes to the low-order end of the byte sequence to shift the value up. This may be your best option.
If you need to eliminate duplicates of really huge random numbers, then that is trickier. Even with really huge random numbers, removing duplicates also makes them significantly biased and not random at all. If you have a really large set of unduplicated really huge random numbers and you randomly select from the ones not yet selected, then the bias is only the bias in creating the huge values for the really huge set of numbers from which to choose. A reverse version of Durstenfeld's version of the Yates-Fisher could be used to randomly choose values from a really huge set of them, remove them from the remaining values from which to choose and insert them into a new array that is a subset and could do this with just the source and target arrays in situ. This would be very efficient.
This may be a good strategy for getting a small number of random numbers with enormous values from a really large set of them in which they are not duplicated. Just pick a random location in the source set, obtain its value, swap its value with the top element in the source set, reduce the size of the source set by one and repeat with the reduced size source set until you have chosen enough values. This is essentiall the Durstenfeld version of Fisher-Yates in reverse. You can then use the Dursenfeld version of the Fisher-Yates algorithm to insert the acquired values into the destination set. However, that is overkill since they should be randomly chosen and randomly ordered as given here.
Both algorithms assume you have some random number instance method, nextInt(int setSize), that generates a random integer from zero to setSize meaning there are setSize possible values. In this case, it will be the size of the array since the last index to the array is size-1.
The first algorithm is the Durstenfeld version of Fisher-Yates (aka Knuth) shuffle algorithm as applied to an array of arbitrary length, one that simply randomly positions integers from 0 to the length of the array into the array. The array need not be an array of integers, but can be an array of any objects that are acquired sequentially which, effectively, makes it an array of reference pointers. It is simple, short and very effective
int size = someNumber;
int[] int array = new int[size]; // here is the array to load
int location; // this will get assigned a value before used
// i will also conveniently be the value to load, but any sequentially acquired
// object will work
for (int i = 0; i <= size; i++) { // conveniently, i is also the value to load
// you can instance or acquire any object at this place in the algorithm to load
// by reference, into the array and use a pointer to it in place of j
int j = i; // in this example, j is trivially i
if (i == 0) { // first integer goes into first location
array[i] = j; // this may get swapped from here later
} else { // subsequent integers go into random locations
// the next random location will be somewhere in the locations
// already used or a new one at the end
// here we get the next random location
// to preserve true randomness without a significant bias
// it is REALLY IMPORTANT that the newest value could be
// stored in the newest location, that is,
// location has to be able to randomly have the value i
int location = nextInt(i + 1); // a random value between 0 and i
// move the random location's value to the new location
array[i] = array[location];
array[location] = j; // put the new value into the random location
} // end if...else
} // end for
Voila, you now have an already randomized array.
If you want to randomly shuffle an array you already have, here is the standard Fisher-Yates algorithm.
type[] array = new type[size];
// some code that loads array...
// randomly pick an item anywhere in the current array segment,
// swap it with the top element in the current array segment,
// then shorten the array segment by 1
// just as with the Durstenfeld version above,
// it is REALLY IMPORTANT that an element could get
// swapped with itself to avoid any bias in the randomization
type temp; // this will get assigned a value before used
int location; // this will get assigned a value before used
for (int i = arrayLength -1 ; i > 0; i--) {
int location = nextInt(i + 1);
temp = array[i];
array[i] = array[location];
array[location] = temp;
} // end for
For sequenced collections and sets, i.e. some type of list object, you could just use adds/or inserts with an index value that allows you to insert items anywhere, but it has to allow adding or appending after the current last item to avoid creating bias in the randomization.
Shuffling N elements doesn't take up excessive memory...think about it. You only swap one element at a time, so the maximum memory used is that of N+1 elements.
Assuming you have a random or pseudo-random number generator, even if it's not guaranteed to return unique values, you can implement one that returns unique values each time using this code, assuming that the upper limit remains constant (i.e. you always call it with random(10), and don't call it with random(10); random(11).
The code doesn't check for errors. You can add that yourself if you want to.
It also requires a lot of memory if you want a large range of numbers.
/* the function returns a random number between 0 and max -1
* not necessarily unique
* I assume it's written
*/
int random(int max);
/* the function returns a unique random number between 0 and max - 1 */
int unique_random(int max)
{
static int *list = NULL; /* contains a list of numbers we haven't returned */
static int in_progress = 0; /* 0 --> we haven't started randomizing numbers
* 1 --> we have started randomizing numbers
*/
static int count;
static prev_max = 0;
// initialize the list
if (!in_progress || (prev_max != max)) {
if (list != NULL) {
free(list);
}
list = malloc(sizeof(int) * max);
prev_max = max;
in_progress = 1;
count = max - 1;
int i;
for (i = max - 1; i >= 0; --i) {
list[i] = i;
}
}
/* now choose one from the list */
int index = random(count);
int retval = list[index];
/* now we throw away the returned value.
* we do this by shortening the list by 1
* and replacing the element we returned with
* the highest remaining number
*/
swap(&list[index], &list[count]);
/* when the count reaches 0 we start over */
if (count == 0) {
in_progress = 0;
free(list);
list = 0;
} else { /* reduce the counter by 1 */
count--;
}
}
/* swap two numbers */
void swap(int *x, int *y)
{
int temp = *x;
*x = *y;
*y = temp;
}
Actually, there's a minor point to make here; a random number generator which is not permitted to repeat is not random.
Suppose you wanted to generate a series of 256 random numbers without repeats.
Create a 256-bit (32-byte) memory block initialized with zeros, let's call it b
Your looping variable will be n, the number of numbers yet to be generated
Loop from n = 256 to n = 1
Generate a random number r in the range [0, n)
Find the r-th zero bit in your memory block b, let's call it p
Put p in your list of results, an array called q
Flip the p-th bit in memory block b to 1
After the n = 1 pass, you are done generating your list of numbers
Here's a short example of what I am talking about, using n = 4 initially:
**Setup**
b = 0000
q = []
**First loop pass, where n = 4**
r = 2
p = 2
b = 0010
q = [2]
**Second loop pass, where n = 3**
r = 2
p = 3
b = 0011
q = [2, 3]
**Third loop pass, where n = 2**
r = 0
p = 0
b = 1011
q = [2, 3, 0]
** Fourth and final loop pass, where n = 1**
r = 0
p = 1
b = 1111
q = [2, 3, 0, 1]
Please check answers at
Generate sequence of integers in random order without constructing the whole list upfront
and also my answer lies there as
very simple random is 1+((power(r,x)-1) mod p) will be from 1 to p for values of x from 1 to p and will be random where r and p are prime numbers and r <> p.
I asked a similar question before but mine was for the whole range of a int see Looking for a Hash Function /Ordered Int/ to /Shuffled Int/
static std::unordered_set<long> s;
long l = 0;
for(; !l && (s.end() != s.find(l)); l = generator());
v.insert(l);
generator() being your random number generator. You roll numbers as long as the entry is not in your set, then you add what you find in it. You get the idea.
I did it with long for the example, but you should make that a template if your PRNG is templatized.
Alternative is to use a cryptographically secure PRNG that will have a very low probability to generate twice the same number.
If you don't mean poor statisticall properties of generated sequence, there is one method:
Let's say you want to generate N numbers, each of 1024 bits each. You can sacrifice some bits of generated number to be "counter".
So you generate each random number, but into some bits you choosen you put binary encoded counter (from variable, you increase each time next random number is generated).
You can split that number into single bits and put it in some of less significant bits of generated number.
That way you are sure you get unique number each time.
I mean for example each generated number looks like that:
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxyyxxxxyxyyyyxxyxx
where x is take directly from generator, and ys are taken from counter variable.
Mersenne twister
Description of which can be found here on Wikipedia: Mersenne twister
Look at the bottom of the page for implementations in various languages.
The problem is to select a "random" sequence of N unique numbers from the range 1..M where there is no constraint on the relationship between N and M (M could be much bigger, about the same, or even smaller than N; they may not be relatively prime).
Expanding on the linear feedback shift register answer: for a given M, construct a maximal LFSR for the smallest power of two that is larger than M. Then just grab your numbers from the LFSR throwing out numbers larger than M. On average, you will throw out at most half the generated numbers (since by construction more than half the range of the LFSR is less than M), so the expected running time of getting a number is O(1). You are not storing previously generated numbers so space consumption is O(1) too. If you cycle before getting N numbers then M less than N (or the LFSR is constructed incorrectly).
You can find the parameters for maximum length LFSRs up to 168 bits here (from wikipedia): http://www.xilinx.com/support/documentation/application_notes/xapp052.pdf
Here's some java code:
/**
* Generate a sequence of unique "random" numbers in [0,M)
* #author dkoes
*
*/
public class UniqueRandom
{
long lfsr;
long mask;
long max;
private static long seed = 1;
//indexed by number of bits
private static int [][] taps = {
null, // 0
null, // 1
null, // 2
{3,2}, //3
{4,3},
{5,3},
{6,5},
{7,6},
{8,6,5,4},
{9,5},
{10,7},
{11,9},
{12,6,4,1},
{13,4,3,1},
{14,5,3,1},
{15,14},
{16,15,13,4},
{17,14},
{18,11},
{19,6,2,1},
{20,17},
{21,19},
{22,21},
{23,18},
{24,23,22,17},
{25,22},
{26,6,2,1},
{27,5,2,1},
{28,25},
{29,27},
{30,6,4,1},
{31,28},
{32,22,2,1},
{33,20},
{34,27,2,1},
{35,33},
{36,25},
{37,5,4,3,2,1},
{38,6,5,1},
{39,35},
{40,38,21,19},
{41,38},
{42,41,20,19},
{43,42,38,37},
{44,43,18,17},
{45,44,42,41},
{46,45,26,25},
{47,42},
{48,47,21,20},
{49,40},
{50,49,24,23},
{51,50,36,35},
{52,49},
{53,52,38,37},
{54,53,18,17},
{55,31},
{56,55,35,34},
{57,50},
{58,39},
{59,58,38,37},
{60,59},
{61,60,46,45},
{62,61,6,5},
{63,62},
};
//m is upperbound; things break if it isn't positive
UniqueRandom(long m)
{
max = m;
lfsr = seed; //could easily pass a starting point instead
//figure out number of bits
int bits = 0;
long b = m;
while((b >>>= 1) != 0)
{
bits++;
}
bits++;
if(bits < 3)
bits = 3;
mask = 0;
for(int i = 0; i < taps[bits].length; i++)
{
mask |= (1L << (taps[bits][i]-1));
}
}
//return -1 if we've cycled
long next()
{
long ret = -1;
if(lfsr == 0)
return -1;
do {
ret = lfsr;
//update lfsr - from wikipedia
long lsb = lfsr & 1;
lfsr >>>= 1;
if(lsb == 1)
lfsr ^= mask;
if(lfsr == seed)
lfsr = 0; //cycled, stick
ret--; //zero is stuck state, never generated so sub 1 to get it
} while(ret >= max);
return ret;
}
}
Here is a way to random without repeating results. It also works for strings. Its in C# but the logig should work in many places. Put the random results in a list and check if the new random element is in that list. If not than you have a new random element. If it is in that list, repeat the random until you get an element that is not in that list.
List<string> Erledigte = new List<string>();
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
label1.Text = "";
listBox1.Items.Add("a");
listBox1.Items.Add("b");
listBox1.Items.Add("c");
listBox1.Items.Add("d");
listBox1.Items.Add("e");
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Random rand = new Random();
int index=rand.Next(0, listBox1.Items.Count);
string rndString = listBox1.Items[index].ToString();
if (listBox1.Items.Count <= Erledigte.Count)
{
return;
}
else
{
if (Erledigte.Contains(rndString))
{
//MessageBox.Show("vorhanden");
while (Erledigte.Contains(rndString))
{
index = rand.Next(0, listBox1.Items.Count);
rndString = listBox1.Items[index].ToString();
}
}
Erledigte.Add(rndString);
label1.Text += rndString;
}
}
For a sequence to be random there should not be any auto correlation. The restriction that the numbers should not repeat means the next number should depend on all the previous numbers which means it is not random anymore....
If you can generate 'small' random numbers, you can generate 'large' random numbers by integrating them: add a small random increment to each 'previous'.
const size_t amount = 100; // a limited amount of random numbers
vector<long int> numbers;
numbers.reserve( amount );
const short int spread = 250; // about 250 between each random number
numbers.push_back( myrandom( spread ) );
for( int n = 0; n != amount; ++n ) {
const short int increment = myrandom( spread );
numbers.push_back( numbers.back() + increment );
}
myshuffle( numbers );
The myrandom and myshuffle functions I hereby generously delegate to others :)
to have non repeated random numbers and to avoid waistingtime with checking for doubles numbers and get new numbers over and over use the below method which will assure the minimum usage of Rand:
for example if you want to get 100 non repeated random number:
1. fill an array with numbers from 1 to 100
2. get a random number using Rand function in the range of (1-100)
3. use the genarted random number as an Index to get th value from the array (Numbers[IndexGeneratedFromRandFunction]
4. shift the number in the array after that Index to the left
5. repeat from step 2 but now the the rang should be (1-99) and go on
now we have a array with different numbers!
int main() {
int b[(the number
if them)];
for (int i = 0; i < (the number of them); i++) {
int a = rand() % (the number of them + 1) + 1;
int j = 0;
while (j < i) {
if (a == b[j]) {
a = rand() % (the number of them + 1) + 1;
j = -1;
}
j++;
}
b[i] = a;
}
}
I would like to get 2 random different elements from an std::vector. How can I do this so that:
It is fast (it is done thousands of times in my algorithm)
It is elegant
The elements selection is really uniformly distributed
For elegance and simplicty:
void Choose (const int size, int &first, int &second)
{
// pick a random element
first = rand () * size / MAX_RAND;
// pick a random element from what's left (there is one fewer to choose from)...
second = rand () * (size - 1) / MAX_RAND;
// ...and adjust second choice to take into account the first choice
if (second >= first)
{
++second;
}
}
using first and second to index the vector.
For uniformness, this is very tricky since as size approaches RAND_MAX there will be a bias towards the lower values and if size exceeds RAND_MAX then there will be elements that are never chosen. One solution to overcome this is to use a binary search:
int GetRand (int size)
{
int lower = 0, upper = size;
do
{
int mid = (lower + upper) / 2;
if (rand () > RAND_MAX / 2) // not a great test, perhaps use parity of rand ()?
{
lower = mid;
}
else
{
upper = mid;
}
} while (upper != lower); // this is just to show the idea,
// need to cope with lower == mid and lower != upper
// and all the other edge conditions
return lower;
}
What you need is to generate M uniformly distributed random numbers from [0, N) range, but there is one caveat here.
One needs to note that your statement of the problem is ambiguous. What is meant by the uniformly distributed selection? One thing is to say that each index has to be selected with equal probability (of M/N, of course). Another thing is to say that each two-index combination has to be selected with equal probability. These two are not the same. Which one did you have in mind?
If M is considerably smaller than N, the classic algorithm for selecting M numbers out of [0, N) range is Bob Floyd algorithm that can be found in Bentley's "Programming Peals" book. It looks as follows (a sketch)
for (int j = N - M; i < N; ++j) {
int rand = random(0, j); // generate a random integer in range [0, j]
if (`rand` has not been generated before)
output rand;
else
output j;
}
In order to implement the check of whether rand has already been generated or not for relatively high M some kind of implementation of a set is necessary, but in your case M=2 it is straightforward and easy.
Note that this algorithm distributes the sets of M numbers uniformly. Also, this algorithm requires exactly M iterations (attempts) to generate M random numbers, i.e. it doesn't follow that flawed "trial-and-error" approach often used in various ad-hoc algorithms intended to solve the same problem.
Adapting the above to your specific situation, the correct algorithm will look as follows
first = random(0, N - 2);
second = random(0, N - 1);
if (second == first)
second = N - 1;
(I leave out the internal details of random(a, b) as an implementation detail).
It might not be immediately obvious why the above works correctly and produces a truly uniform distribution, but it really does :)
How about using a std::queue and doing std::random_shuffle on them. Then just pop til your hearts content?
Not elegant, but extreamly simple: just draw a random number in [0, vector.size()[ and check it's not twice the same.
Simplicity is also in some way elegance ;)
What do you call fast ? I guess this can be done thousands of times within a millisecond.
Whenever need something random, you are going to have various questions about the random number properties regarding uniformity, distribution and so on.
Assuming you've found a suitable source of randomness for your application, then the simplest way to generate pairs of uncorrelated entries is just to pick two random indexes and test them to ensure they aren't equal.
Given a vector of N+1 entries, another option is to generate an index i in the range 0..N. element[i] is choice one. Swap elements i and N. Generate an index j in the range 0..(N-1). element[j] is your second choice. This slowly shuffles your vector which may be problematical, but it can be avoided by using a second vector which holds indexes into the first, and shuffling that. This method trades a swap for the index comparison and tends to be more efficient for small vectors (a dozen or fewer elements, typically) as it avoids having to do multiple comparisons as the number of collisions increase.
You might wanna look into the gnu scientific library. There are some pretty nice random number generators in there that are guaranteed to be random down to the bit level.
Duplicate:
Unique random numbers in O(1)?
I want an pseudo random number generator that can generate numbers with no repeats in a random order.
For example:
random(10)
might return
5, 9, 1, 4, 2, 8, 3, 7, 6, 10
Is there a better way to do it other than making the range of numbers and shuffling them about, or checking the generated list for repeats?
Edit:
Also I want it to be efficient in generating big numbers without the entire range.
Edit:
I see everyone suggesting shuffle algorithms. But if I want to generate large random number (1024 byte+) then that method would take alot more memory than if I just used a regular RNG and inserted into a Set until it was a specified length, right? Is there no better mathematical algorithm for this.
You may be interested in a linear feedback shift register.
We used to build these out of hardware, but I've also done them in software. It uses a shift register with some of the bits xor'ed and fed back to the input, and if you pick just the right "taps" you can get a sequence that's as long as the register size. That is, a 16-bit lfsr can produce a sequence 65535 long with no repeats. It's statistically random but of course eminently repeatable. Also, if it's done wrong, you can get some embarrassingly short sequences. If you look up the lfsr, you will find examples of how to construct them properly (which is to say, "maximal length").
A shuffle is a perfectly good way to do this (provided you do not introduce a bias using the naive algorithm). See Fisher-Yates shuffle.
If a random number is guaranteed to never repeat it is no longer random and the amount of randomness decreases as the numbers are generated (after nine numbers random(10) is rather predictable and even after only eight you have a 50-50 chance).
I understand tou don't want a shuffle for large ranges, since you'd have to store the whole list to do so.
Instead, use a reversible pseudo-random hash. Then feed in the values 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 etc in turn.
There are infinite numbers of hashes like this. They're not too hard to generate if they're restricted to a power of 2, but any base can be used.
Here's one that would work for example if you wanted to go through all 2^32 32 bit values. It's easiest to write because the implicit mod 2^32 of integer math works to your advantage in this case.
unsigned int reversableHash(unsigned int x)
{
x*=0xDEADBEEF;
x=x^(x>>17);
x*=0x01234567;
x+=0x88776655;
x=x^(x>>4);
x=x^(x>>9);
x*=0x91827363;
x=x^(x>>7);
x=x^(x>>11);
x=x^(x>>20);
x*=0x77773333;
return x;
}
If you don't mind mediocre randomness properties and if the number of elements allows it then you could use a linear congruential random number generator.
A shuffle is the best you can do for random numbers in a specific range with no repeats. The reason that the method you describe (randomly generate numbers and put them in a Set until you reach a specified length) is less efficient is because of duplicates. Theoretically, that algorithm might never finish. At best it will finish in an indeterminable amount of time, as compared to a shuffle, which will always run in a highly predictable amount of time.
Response to edits and comments:
If, as you indicate in the comments, the range of numbers is very large and you want to select relatively few of them at random with no repeats, then the likelihood of repeats diminishes rapidly. The bigger the difference in size between the range and the number of selections, the smaller the likelihood of repeat selections, and the better the performance will be for the select-and-check algorithm you describe in the question.
What about using GUID generator (like in the one in .NET). Granted it is not guaranteed that there will be no duplicates, however the chance getting one is pretty low.
This has been asked before - see my answer to the previous question. In a nutshell: You can use a block cipher to generate a secure (random) permutation over any range you want, without having to store the entire permutation at any point.
If you want to creating large (say, 64 bits or greater) random numbers with no repeats, then just create them. If you're using a good random number generator, that actually has enough entropy, then the odds of generating repeats are so miniscule as to not be worth worrying about.
For instance, when generating cryptographic keys, no one actually bothers checking to see if they've generated the same key before; since you're trusting your random number generator that a dedicated attacker won't be able to get the same key out, then why would you expect that you would come up with the same key accidentally?
Of course, if you have a bad random number generator (like the Debian SSL random number generator vulnerability), or are generating small enough numbers that the birthday paradox gives you a high chance of collision, then you will need to actually do something to ensure you don't get repeats. But for large random numbers with a good generator, just trust probability not to give you any repeats.
As you generate your numbers, use a Bloom filter to detect duplicates. This would use a minimal amount of memory. There would be no need to store earlier numbers in the series at all.
The trade off is that your list could not be exhaustive in your range. If your numbers are truly on the order of 256^1024, that's hardly any trade off at all.
(Of course if they are actually random on that scale, even bothering to detect duplicates is a waste of time. If every computer on earth generated a trillion random numbers that size every second for trillions of years, the chance of a collision is still absolutely negligible.)
I second gbarry's answer about using an LFSR. They are very efficient and simple to implement even in software and are guaranteed not to repeat in (2^N - 1) uses for an LFSR with an N-bit shift-register.
There are some drawbacks however: by observing a small number of outputs from the RNG, one can reconstruct the LFSR and predict all values it will generate, making them not usable for cryptography and anywhere were a good RNG is needed. The second problem is that either the all zero word or the all one (in terms of bits) word is invalid depending on the LFSR implementation. The third issue which is relevant to your question is that the maximum number generated by the LFSR is always a power of 2 - 1 (or power of 2 - 2).
The first drawback might not be an issue depending on your application. From the example you gave, it seems that you are not expecting zero to be among the answers; so, the second issue does not seem relevant to your case.
The maximum value (and thus range) problem can solved by reusing the LFSR until you get a number within your range. Here's an example:
Say you want to have numbers between 1 and 10 (as in your example). You would use a 4-bit LFSR which has a range [1, 15] inclusive. Here's a pseudo code as to how to get number in the range [1,10]:
x = LFSR.getRandomNumber();
while (x > 10) {
x = LFSR.getRandomNumber();
}
You should embed the previous code in your RNG; so that the caller wouldn't care about implementation.
Note that this would slow down your RNG if you use a large shift-register and the maximum number you want is not a power of 2 - 1.
This answer suggests some strategies for getting what you want and ensuring they are in a random order using some already well-known algorithms.
There is an inside out version of the Fisher-Yates shuffle algorithm, called the Durstenfeld version, that randomly distributes sequentially acquired items into arrays and collections while loading the array or collection.
One thing to remember is that the Fisher-Yates (AKA Knuth) shuffle or the Durstenfeld version used at load time is highly efficient with arrays of objects because only the reference pointer to the object is being moved and the object itself doesn't have to be examined or compared with any other object as part of the algorithm.
I will give both algorithms further below.
If you want really huge random numbers, on the order of 1024 bytes or more, a really good random generator that can generate unsigned bytes or words at a time will suffice. Randomly generate as many bytes or words as you need to construct the number, make it into an object with a reference pointer to it and, hey presto, you have a really huge random integer. If you need a specific really huge range, you can add a base value of zero bytes to the low-order end of the byte sequence to shift the value up. This may be your best option.
If you need to eliminate duplicates of really huge random numbers, then that is trickier. Even with really huge random numbers, removing duplicates also makes them significantly biased and not random at all. If you have a really large set of unduplicated really huge random numbers and you randomly select from the ones not yet selected, then the bias is only the bias in creating the huge values for the really huge set of numbers from which to choose. A reverse version of Durstenfeld's version of the Yates-Fisher could be used to randomly choose values from a really huge set of them, remove them from the remaining values from which to choose and insert them into a new array that is a subset and could do this with just the source and target arrays in situ. This would be very efficient.
This may be a good strategy for getting a small number of random numbers with enormous values from a really large set of them in which they are not duplicated. Just pick a random location in the source set, obtain its value, swap its value with the top element in the source set, reduce the size of the source set by one and repeat with the reduced size source set until you have chosen enough values. This is essentiall the Durstenfeld version of Fisher-Yates in reverse. You can then use the Dursenfeld version of the Fisher-Yates algorithm to insert the acquired values into the destination set. However, that is overkill since they should be randomly chosen and randomly ordered as given here.
Both algorithms assume you have some random number instance method, nextInt(int setSize), that generates a random integer from zero to setSize meaning there are setSize possible values. In this case, it will be the size of the array since the last index to the array is size-1.
The first algorithm is the Durstenfeld version of Fisher-Yates (aka Knuth) shuffle algorithm as applied to an array of arbitrary length, one that simply randomly positions integers from 0 to the length of the array into the array. The array need not be an array of integers, but can be an array of any objects that are acquired sequentially which, effectively, makes it an array of reference pointers. It is simple, short and very effective
int size = someNumber;
int[] int array = new int[size]; // here is the array to load
int location; // this will get assigned a value before used
// i will also conveniently be the value to load, but any sequentially acquired
// object will work
for (int i = 0; i <= size; i++) { // conveniently, i is also the value to load
// you can instance or acquire any object at this place in the algorithm to load
// by reference, into the array and use a pointer to it in place of j
int j = i; // in this example, j is trivially i
if (i == 0) { // first integer goes into first location
array[i] = j; // this may get swapped from here later
} else { // subsequent integers go into random locations
// the next random location will be somewhere in the locations
// already used or a new one at the end
// here we get the next random location
// to preserve true randomness without a significant bias
// it is REALLY IMPORTANT that the newest value could be
// stored in the newest location, that is,
// location has to be able to randomly have the value i
int location = nextInt(i + 1); // a random value between 0 and i
// move the random location's value to the new location
array[i] = array[location];
array[location] = j; // put the new value into the random location
} // end if...else
} // end for
Voila, you now have an already randomized array.
If you want to randomly shuffle an array you already have, here is the standard Fisher-Yates algorithm.
type[] array = new type[size];
// some code that loads array...
// randomly pick an item anywhere in the current array segment,
// swap it with the top element in the current array segment,
// then shorten the array segment by 1
// just as with the Durstenfeld version above,
// it is REALLY IMPORTANT that an element could get
// swapped with itself to avoid any bias in the randomization
type temp; // this will get assigned a value before used
int location; // this will get assigned a value before used
for (int i = arrayLength -1 ; i > 0; i--) {
int location = nextInt(i + 1);
temp = array[i];
array[i] = array[location];
array[location] = temp;
} // end for
For sequenced collections and sets, i.e. some type of list object, you could just use adds/or inserts with an index value that allows you to insert items anywhere, but it has to allow adding or appending after the current last item to avoid creating bias in the randomization.
Shuffling N elements doesn't take up excessive memory...think about it. You only swap one element at a time, so the maximum memory used is that of N+1 elements.
Assuming you have a random or pseudo-random number generator, even if it's not guaranteed to return unique values, you can implement one that returns unique values each time using this code, assuming that the upper limit remains constant (i.e. you always call it with random(10), and don't call it with random(10); random(11).
The code doesn't check for errors. You can add that yourself if you want to.
It also requires a lot of memory if you want a large range of numbers.
/* the function returns a random number between 0 and max -1
* not necessarily unique
* I assume it's written
*/
int random(int max);
/* the function returns a unique random number between 0 and max - 1 */
int unique_random(int max)
{
static int *list = NULL; /* contains a list of numbers we haven't returned */
static int in_progress = 0; /* 0 --> we haven't started randomizing numbers
* 1 --> we have started randomizing numbers
*/
static int count;
static prev_max = 0;
// initialize the list
if (!in_progress || (prev_max != max)) {
if (list != NULL) {
free(list);
}
list = malloc(sizeof(int) * max);
prev_max = max;
in_progress = 1;
count = max - 1;
int i;
for (i = max - 1; i >= 0; --i) {
list[i] = i;
}
}
/* now choose one from the list */
int index = random(count);
int retval = list[index];
/* now we throw away the returned value.
* we do this by shortening the list by 1
* and replacing the element we returned with
* the highest remaining number
*/
swap(&list[index], &list[count]);
/* when the count reaches 0 we start over */
if (count == 0) {
in_progress = 0;
free(list);
list = 0;
} else { /* reduce the counter by 1 */
count--;
}
}
/* swap two numbers */
void swap(int *x, int *y)
{
int temp = *x;
*x = *y;
*y = temp;
}
Actually, there's a minor point to make here; a random number generator which is not permitted to repeat is not random.
Suppose you wanted to generate a series of 256 random numbers without repeats.
Create a 256-bit (32-byte) memory block initialized with zeros, let's call it b
Your looping variable will be n, the number of numbers yet to be generated
Loop from n = 256 to n = 1
Generate a random number r in the range [0, n)
Find the r-th zero bit in your memory block b, let's call it p
Put p in your list of results, an array called q
Flip the p-th bit in memory block b to 1
After the n = 1 pass, you are done generating your list of numbers
Here's a short example of what I am talking about, using n = 4 initially:
**Setup**
b = 0000
q = []
**First loop pass, where n = 4**
r = 2
p = 2
b = 0010
q = [2]
**Second loop pass, where n = 3**
r = 2
p = 3
b = 0011
q = [2, 3]
**Third loop pass, where n = 2**
r = 0
p = 0
b = 1011
q = [2, 3, 0]
** Fourth and final loop pass, where n = 1**
r = 0
p = 1
b = 1111
q = [2, 3, 0, 1]
Please check answers at
Generate sequence of integers in random order without constructing the whole list upfront
and also my answer lies there as
very simple random is 1+((power(r,x)-1) mod p) will be from 1 to p for values of x from 1 to p and will be random where r and p are prime numbers and r <> p.
I asked a similar question before but mine was for the whole range of a int see Looking for a Hash Function /Ordered Int/ to /Shuffled Int/
static std::unordered_set<long> s;
long l = 0;
for(; !l && (s.end() != s.find(l)); l = generator());
v.insert(l);
generator() being your random number generator. You roll numbers as long as the entry is not in your set, then you add what you find in it. You get the idea.
I did it with long for the example, but you should make that a template if your PRNG is templatized.
Alternative is to use a cryptographically secure PRNG that will have a very low probability to generate twice the same number.
If you don't mean poor statisticall properties of generated sequence, there is one method:
Let's say you want to generate N numbers, each of 1024 bits each. You can sacrifice some bits of generated number to be "counter".
So you generate each random number, but into some bits you choosen you put binary encoded counter (from variable, you increase each time next random number is generated).
You can split that number into single bits and put it in some of less significant bits of generated number.
That way you are sure you get unique number each time.
I mean for example each generated number looks like that:
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxyyxxxxyxyyyyxxyxx
where x is take directly from generator, and ys are taken from counter variable.
Mersenne twister
Description of which can be found here on Wikipedia: Mersenne twister
Look at the bottom of the page for implementations in various languages.
The problem is to select a "random" sequence of N unique numbers from the range 1..M where there is no constraint on the relationship between N and M (M could be much bigger, about the same, or even smaller than N; they may not be relatively prime).
Expanding on the linear feedback shift register answer: for a given M, construct a maximal LFSR for the smallest power of two that is larger than M. Then just grab your numbers from the LFSR throwing out numbers larger than M. On average, you will throw out at most half the generated numbers (since by construction more than half the range of the LFSR is less than M), so the expected running time of getting a number is O(1). You are not storing previously generated numbers so space consumption is O(1) too. If you cycle before getting N numbers then M less than N (or the LFSR is constructed incorrectly).
You can find the parameters for maximum length LFSRs up to 168 bits here (from wikipedia): http://www.xilinx.com/support/documentation/application_notes/xapp052.pdf
Here's some java code:
/**
* Generate a sequence of unique "random" numbers in [0,M)
* #author dkoes
*
*/
public class UniqueRandom
{
long lfsr;
long mask;
long max;
private static long seed = 1;
//indexed by number of bits
private static int [][] taps = {
null, // 0
null, // 1
null, // 2
{3,2}, //3
{4,3},
{5,3},
{6,5},
{7,6},
{8,6,5,4},
{9,5},
{10,7},
{11,9},
{12,6,4,1},
{13,4,3,1},
{14,5,3,1},
{15,14},
{16,15,13,4},
{17,14},
{18,11},
{19,6,2,1},
{20,17},
{21,19},
{22,21},
{23,18},
{24,23,22,17},
{25,22},
{26,6,2,1},
{27,5,2,1},
{28,25},
{29,27},
{30,6,4,1},
{31,28},
{32,22,2,1},
{33,20},
{34,27,2,1},
{35,33},
{36,25},
{37,5,4,3,2,1},
{38,6,5,1},
{39,35},
{40,38,21,19},
{41,38},
{42,41,20,19},
{43,42,38,37},
{44,43,18,17},
{45,44,42,41},
{46,45,26,25},
{47,42},
{48,47,21,20},
{49,40},
{50,49,24,23},
{51,50,36,35},
{52,49},
{53,52,38,37},
{54,53,18,17},
{55,31},
{56,55,35,34},
{57,50},
{58,39},
{59,58,38,37},
{60,59},
{61,60,46,45},
{62,61,6,5},
{63,62},
};
//m is upperbound; things break if it isn't positive
UniqueRandom(long m)
{
max = m;
lfsr = seed; //could easily pass a starting point instead
//figure out number of bits
int bits = 0;
long b = m;
while((b >>>= 1) != 0)
{
bits++;
}
bits++;
if(bits < 3)
bits = 3;
mask = 0;
for(int i = 0; i < taps[bits].length; i++)
{
mask |= (1L << (taps[bits][i]-1));
}
}
//return -1 if we've cycled
long next()
{
long ret = -1;
if(lfsr == 0)
return -1;
do {
ret = lfsr;
//update lfsr - from wikipedia
long lsb = lfsr & 1;
lfsr >>>= 1;
if(lsb == 1)
lfsr ^= mask;
if(lfsr == seed)
lfsr = 0; //cycled, stick
ret--; //zero is stuck state, never generated so sub 1 to get it
} while(ret >= max);
return ret;
}
}
Here is a way to random without repeating results. It also works for strings. Its in C# but the logig should work in many places. Put the random results in a list and check if the new random element is in that list. If not than you have a new random element. If it is in that list, repeat the random until you get an element that is not in that list.
List<string> Erledigte = new List<string>();
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
label1.Text = "";
listBox1.Items.Add("a");
listBox1.Items.Add("b");
listBox1.Items.Add("c");
listBox1.Items.Add("d");
listBox1.Items.Add("e");
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Random rand = new Random();
int index=rand.Next(0, listBox1.Items.Count);
string rndString = listBox1.Items[index].ToString();
if (listBox1.Items.Count <= Erledigte.Count)
{
return;
}
else
{
if (Erledigte.Contains(rndString))
{
//MessageBox.Show("vorhanden");
while (Erledigte.Contains(rndString))
{
index = rand.Next(0, listBox1.Items.Count);
rndString = listBox1.Items[index].ToString();
}
}
Erledigte.Add(rndString);
label1.Text += rndString;
}
}
For a sequence to be random there should not be any auto correlation. The restriction that the numbers should not repeat means the next number should depend on all the previous numbers which means it is not random anymore....
If you can generate 'small' random numbers, you can generate 'large' random numbers by integrating them: add a small random increment to each 'previous'.
const size_t amount = 100; // a limited amount of random numbers
vector<long int> numbers;
numbers.reserve( amount );
const short int spread = 250; // about 250 between each random number
numbers.push_back( myrandom( spread ) );
for( int n = 0; n != amount; ++n ) {
const short int increment = myrandom( spread );
numbers.push_back( numbers.back() + increment );
}
myshuffle( numbers );
The myrandom and myshuffle functions I hereby generously delegate to others :)
to have non repeated random numbers and to avoid waistingtime with checking for doubles numbers and get new numbers over and over use the below method which will assure the minimum usage of Rand:
for example if you want to get 100 non repeated random number:
1. fill an array with numbers from 1 to 100
2. get a random number using Rand function in the range of (1-100)
3. use the genarted random number as an Index to get th value from the array (Numbers[IndexGeneratedFromRandFunction]
4. shift the number in the array after that Index to the left
5. repeat from step 2 but now the the rang should be (1-99) and go on
now we have a array with different numbers!
int main() {
int b[(the number
if them)];
for (int i = 0; i < (the number of them); i++) {
int a = rand() % (the number of them + 1) + 1;
int j = 0;
while (j < i) {
if (a == b[j]) {
a = rand() % (the number of them + 1) + 1;
j = -1;
}
j++;
}
b[i] = a;
}
}