How would i prevent duplicating numbers from random numbers.
I need to generate 5 numbers between 1 and 9 that are each different.
I would often get same numbers like 23334, how can i prevent that?
Any help would be great!
int num2 = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
int num1 = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
int num5 = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
int num3 = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
int num4 = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
One option is to use shuffle algorithm (e.g. Fisher-Yates shuffle ) to generate random sequence from 1 to 9, then take first 5 numbers of the sequence
Further explanation on StackOverflow: https://stackoverflow.com/a/196065/950427
Set<Integer> set=new HashSet<>();
while (set.size()<5) {
set.add( Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1));
}
After the set is filled you have 5 unique random numbers.
UPDATE: just to illustrate Jared Burrows' comment
Create a List includes the numbers that you want (1 to 9).
Generate random number from 0 to (size of the list minus 1).
Remove one element by index from the above generated random number. And add the removed element to a array which to be returned as a results
public static void main(String[] args) {
int []answers= returnRandomNonRepeatingNumbers(5,0,9);
for(int answer: answers) {
System.out.println(answer);
}
}
public static int[] returnRandomNonRepeatingNumbers(int sizeYouWant, int poolStart, int poolEnd) {
List<Integer> pool=new ArrayList<Integer>();
for(int i=poolStart;i<=poolEnd;i++) {
pool.add(i);
}
int []answers=new int[sizeYouWant];
for(int i=0;i<sizeYouWant;i++) {
//random index to be pick and remove from pool
int randomIndex = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*(pool.size()-1)));
answers[i]=pool.remove(randomIndex);
}
return answers;
}
If the number of possible random values is small, you want to use shuffle.
List<Integer> values = IntStream.range(0, 10).boxed().collect(toList());
Collections.shuffle(values);
values = values.subList(0, 5);
If the number of possible random values is large, you want to test adding them to a Set (or the original list if small enough)
Set<Integer> valueSet = new HashSet<>();
Random rand = new Random();
while(valuesSet.size() < 5) valuesSet.add(rand.nextInt(9) + 1);
List<Integer> values = new ArrayList<>(valueSet);
Collections.shuffle(values, rand);
Note: you need to shuffle the set as it doesn't preserve order. e.g. the numbers 1,2,3 will always come out in that order with HashSet, not 3,2,1.
Floyd's subset selection algorithm is designed to do exactly what you want, and is extremely efficient even for large sets. Selecting m items from a set of n is O(m) average running time, independent of n. Here's a Java implementation.
/*
* Floyd's algorithm to chose a random subset of m integers
* from a set of n, zero-based.
*/
public static HashSet<Integer> generateMfromN(int m, int n) {
HashSet<Integer> s = new HashSet<Integer>();
for (int j = n-m; j < n; ++j) {
if(! s.add((int)((j+1) * Math.random()))) {
s.add(j);
}
}
return s;
}
One possible approach to this problem can be divide & conquer. Step of following describes the approach:
Say m is the minimum & n is the maximum, within what i wanna get x number of randoms
Choose a random p between m & n. Save it to an array of answer. decrease x by 1 as we get one answer to our problem.
Now take a q a random number between m & p-1, another r a random number between p+1 & n. Fill up the answer array with q & r decrease x 1 for q and another 1 for the r.
Now carry on this process recursively, until the lower bound (m) & higher bound (n) becomes equal or x becomes 0.
Benefit: benefit of this approach is that, in worst case, it's runtime will be O(x), where x is the number of random number required. The best case scenarion is also o(x), as i have to find at least n number of random. These two comprise average case to θ(x) complexity.
import java.util.Random;
class GenerateDistinctRandom{
static int alreadyPut = 0;
static Random rand = new Random();
public static int[] generateDistinctRandom(int howMany, int rangeMin, int rangeMax)
{
int randomNumbers[] = new int[howMany];
GenerateDistinctRandom.recursiveRandomGenerator(rangeMin, rangeMax, randomNumbers, howMany);
return randomNumbers;
}
private static void recursiveRandomGenerator(int rangeMin, int rangeMax, int[] storage ,int storageSize)
{
if(rangeMax - rangeMin <= 0 || GenerateDistinctRandom.alreadyPut == storageSize)
{
return ;
}
int randomNumber = GenerateDistinctRandom.rand.nextInt(rangeMax-rangeMin) + rangeMin;
storage[GenerateDistinctRandom.alreadyPut] = randomNumber;
GenerateDistinctRandom.alreadyPut++;
//calling the left side of the recursion
recursiveRandomGenerator(rangeMin, randomNumber - 1, storage, storageSize);
recursiveRandomGenerator(randomNumber + 1, rangeMax, storage, storageSize);
}
public static void main(String []args){
int howMany = 5;
int distinctNumber[] = GenerateDistinctRandom.generateDistinctRandom(howMany 0, 9);
for(int i = 0;i < howMany;i++)
{
System.out.println(distinctNumber[i]);
}
}
}
I suppose you would need to store the ones that have been generated into an array and compare the new random number to the list to ensure it is unique.
public static void main (String[] args) throws java.lang.Exception
{
// your code goes here
int[] numbers = new int[5];
int tempNumber = 0;
for(int numberCounter = 0; numberCounter < numbers.length;)
{
tempNumber = (int) Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
if(!contains(numbers, tempNumber)){
numbers[numberCounter++] = tempNumber;
}
}
}
public static boolean contains(final int[] numbersArray, final int tempNumber) {
for (final int numberFromArray : numbersArray) {
if (numberFromArray == tempNumber) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
I notice you did not use an array in your example, so in case you do not know how to use them yet, you could also make 5 variables.
int randomNumber = 0;
int firstNumber = Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1);
int secondNumber = 0;
while(secondNumber == 0){
randomNumber = Math.round((Math.random()*9) +1)l
if(randomNumber != firstNumber){
secondNumber = randomNumber;
}
}
And you could continue making while statements like that. But if you are supposed to know about arrays, you should definitely be using one to store the numbers.
How about this?
package com.se;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Random;
public class TestRandom {
List<Integer> comp = new ArrayList<>();
int listSize = 20;
public void doTask() {
Random ran = new Random();
int i = 0;
while(i < listSize){
int randomNumber = ran.nextInt(80) + 1;
if(!comp.contains(randomNumber)){
comp.add(randomNumber);
i++;
}
}
for(Integer num : comp){
System.out.println(num);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
TestRandom testRandom = new TestRandom();
testRandom.doTask();
}
}
Related
I need to create random numbers that will run through an array without duplicates.
The problem is the duplication and I can't use any of the utils except the Scanner for input (teacher instruction) like java.util.Random or java.util.ArrayList.
I use a function called random that my teacher wrote to us and the function newNum(int num) is where I need what I have asked - random numbers.
package exercise;
import java.util.Scanner;
public class Bingo {
static int size = 10;
static int num;
static int[] arr = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 };
private static Scanner sc;
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.print("Press Enter to start: ");
sc = new Scanner(System.in);
sc.nextLine();
System.out.println("");
// int[] arr = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 };
// int[] tempArray = arr;
int num = random();
// int num = sc.nextInt();
// System.out.println(num);
while (size > 0) {
System.out.println(num);
size--;
newArray(num);
num = random();
newNum(num);
// System.out.println(num);
}
}
public static int random() {
int max = 10;
double r = Math.random();
int num = (int) (r * max + 1);
return num;
}
public static int newNum(int num) {
// Here should go the code for the function for getting only new
// random number without duplications
return num;
}
public static int newArray(int num) {
int[] tempArray = arr;
arr = new int[size];
int x = num - 1;
for (int i = 0; i < x; i++) {
if (i < size) {
arr[i] = tempArray[i];
}
}
for (int i = num; i < size; i++) {
if (i < size) {
int y = i - 1;
arr[y] = tempArray[i];
} else {
int a = size - 1;
arr[a] = tempArray[size];
}
}
return num;
}
}
First of all, you write that you can't use shuffle, but that doesn't mean that you are prohibited from implementing it. It's not that hard, actually.
If you want to do that, use the Fisher-Yates shuffle, as found on wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisher%E2%80%93Yates_shuffle
(by the way, since you are going to school, if you find such a wikipedia article - or any other article - to be interesting, you might propose to your teacher to hold an essay on that, easily earned additional good grade)
Of course, this assumes that you have a vector to shuffle, which is inefficient for large vectors ("random numbers within zero to one billion"). In this case you might want to go with:
To find n random numbers within 0..m
1. Initialize an empty list of already used random numbers which is ordered, called "numbers"
2. for i = 0..n-1
2a: r = random(0..m-i) (uniform distribution)
2b: for every entry in numbers
if entry <= r, r++
2c: sort r into numbers (maybe by using a single bubblesort step)
This shifts the complexity from the size of the vector as before to the amount of generated numbers.
Explanation: In every iteration, we want to find an unused number. We find the rth unused number (there is a range of 0..m-i of unused numbers in iteration i). Now we only need to find out which number is the rth unused one. This is done by the inner iteration. We need numbers to be sorted because of this example: current state: numbers = {5, 1}, r = 4. r < 5 -> do nothing. r >= 1 -> r++. End up with r = 5, got a double entry.
If sorting is not wanted for the resulting list, simply go with two lists.
I'm trying to get random numbers between 0 and 100. But I want them to be unique, not repeated in a sequence. For example if I got 5 numbers, they should be 82,12,53,64,32 and not 82,12,53,12,32
I used this, but it generates same numbers in a sequence.
Random rand = new Random();
selected = rand.nextInt(100);
Add each number in the range sequentially in a list structure.
Shuffle it.
Take the first 'n'.
Here is a simple implementation. This will print 3 unique random numbers from the range 1-10.
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collections;
public class UniqueRandomNumbers {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ArrayList<Integer> list = new ArrayList<Integer>();
for (int i=1; i<11; i++) list.add(i);
Collections.shuffle(list);
for (int i=0; i<3; i++) System.out.println(list.get(i));
}
}
The first part of the fix with the original approach, as Mark Byers pointed out in an answer now deleted, is to use only a single Random instance.
That is what is causing the numbers to be identical. A Random instance is seeded by the current time in milliseconds. For a particular seed value, the 'random' instance will return the exact same sequence of pseudo random numbers.
With Java 8+ you can use the ints method of Random to get an IntStream of random values then distinct and limit to reduce the stream to a number of unique random values.
ThreadLocalRandom.current().ints(0, 100).distinct().limit(5).forEach(System.out::println);
Random also has methods which create LongStreams and DoubleStreams if you need those instead.
If you want all (or a large amount) of the numbers in a range in a random order it might be more efficient to add all of the numbers to a list, shuffle it, and take the first n because the above example is currently implemented by generating random numbers in the range requested and passing them through a set (similarly to Rob Kielty's answer), which may require generating many more than the amount passed to limit because the probability of a generating a new unique number decreases with each one found. Here's an example of the other way:
List<Integer> range = IntStream.range(0, 100).boxed()
.collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));
Collections.shuffle(range);
range.subList(0, 99).forEach(System.out::println);
Create an array of 100 numbers, then randomize their order.
Devise a pseudo-random number generator that has a range of 100.
Create a boolean array of 100 elements, then set an element true when you pick that number. When you pick the next number check against the array and try again if the array element is set. (You can make an easy-to-clear boolean array with an array of long where you shift and mask to access individual bits.)
Use Collections.shuffle() on all 100 numbers and select the first five, as shown here and below.
Console:
59 9 68 24 82
Code:
private static final Random rnd = new Random();
private static final int N = 100;
private static final int K = 5;
private static final List<Integer> S = new ArrayList<>(N);
public static void main(String[] args) {
for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) {
S.add(i + 1);
}
Collections.shuffle(S, rnd);
for (int i = 0; i < K; i++) {
System.out.print(S.get(i) + " ");
}
System.out.println();
}
I feel like this method is worth mentioning.
private static final Random RANDOM = new Random();
/**
* Pick n numbers between 0 (inclusive) and k (inclusive)
* While there are very deterministic ways to do this,
* for large k and small n, this could be easier than creating
* an large array and sorting, i.e. k = 10,000
*/
public Set<Integer> pickRandom(int n, int k) {
final Set<Integer> picked = new HashSet<>();
while (picked.size() < n) {
picked.add(RANDOM.nextInt(k + 1));
}
return picked;
}
I re-factored Anand's answer to make use not only of the unique properties of a Set but also use the boolean false returned by the set.add() when an add to the set fails.
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Random;
import java.util.Set;
public class randomUniqueNumberGenerator {
public static final int SET_SIZE_REQUIRED = 10;
public static final int NUMBER_RANGE = 100;
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random random = new Random();
Set set = new HashSet<Integer>(SET_SIZE_REQUIRED);
while(set.size()< SET_SIZE_REQUIRED) {
while (set.add(random.nextInt(NUMBER_RANGE)) != true)
;
}
assert set.size() == SET_SIZE_REQUIRED;
System.out.println(set);
}
}
I have made this like that.
Random random = new Random();
ArrayList<Integer> arrayList = new ArrayList<Integer>();
while (arrayList.size() < 6) { // how many numbers u need - it will 6
int a = random.nextInt(49)+1; // this will give numbers between 1 and 50.
if (!arrayList.contains(a)) {
arrayList.add(a);
}
}
This will work to generate unique random numbers................
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Random;
public class RandomExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random rand = new Random();
int e;
int i;
int g = 10;
HashSet<Integer> randomNumbers = new HashSet<Integer>();
for (i = 0; i < g; i++) {
e = rand.nextInt(20);
randomNumbers.add(e);
if (randomNumbers.size() <= 10) {
if (randomNumbers.size() == 10) {
g = 10;
}
g++;
randomNumbers.add(e);
}
}
System.out.println("Ten Unique random numbers from 1 to 20 are : " + randomNumbers);
}
}
One clever way to do this is to use exponents of a primitive element in modulus.
For example, 2 is a primitive root mod 101, meaning that the powers of 2 mod 101 give you a non-repeating sequence that sees every number from 1 to 100 inclusive:
2^0 mod 101 = 1
2^1 mod 101 = 2
2^2 mod 101 = 4
...
2^50 mod 101 = 100
2^51 mod 101 = 99
2^52 mod 101 = 97
...
2^100 mod 101 = 1
In Java code, you would write:
void randInts() {
int num=1;
for (int ii=0; ii<101; ii++) {
System.out.println(num);
num= (num*2) % 101;
}
}
Finding a primitive root for a specific modulus can be tricky, but Maple's "primroot" function will do this for you.
I have come here from another question, which has been duplicate of this question (Generating unique random number in java)
Store 1 to 100 numbers in an Array.
Generate random number between 1 to 100 as position and return array[position-1] to get the value
Once you use a number in array, mark the value as -1 ( No need to maintain another array to check if this number is already used)
If value in array is -1, get the random number again to fetch new location in array.
I have easy solution for this problem,
With this we can easily generate n number of unique random numbers,
Its just logic anyone can use it in any language.
for(int i=0;i<4;i++)
{
rn[i]= GenerateRandomNumber();
for (int j=0;j<i;j++)
{
if (rn[i] == rn[j])
{
i--;
}
}
}
Choose n unique random numbers from 0 to m-1.
int[] uniqueRand(int n, int m){
Random rand = new Random();
int[] r = new int[n];
int[] result = new int[n];
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++){
r[i] = rand.nextInt(m-i);
result[i] = r[i];
for(int j = i-1; j >= 0; j--){
if(result[i] >= r[j])
result[i]++;
}
}
return result;
}
Imagine a list containing numbers from 0 to m-1. To choose the first number, we simply use rand.nextInt(m). Then remove the number from the list. Now there remains m-1 numbers, so we call rand.nextInt(m-1). The number we get represents the position in the list. If it is less than the first number, then it is the second number, since the part of list prior to the first number wasn't changed by the removal of the first number. If the position is greater than or equal to the first number, the second number is position+1. Do some further derivation, you can get this algorithm.
Explanation
This algorithm has O(n^2) complexity. So it is good for generating small amount of unique numbers from a large set. While the shuffle based algorithm need at least O(m) to do the shuffle.
Also shuffle based algorithm need memory to store every possible outcome to do the shuffle, this algorithm doesn’t need.
Though it's an old thread, but adding another option might not harm. (JDK 1.8 lambda functions seem to make it easy);
The problem could be broken down into the following steps;
Get a minimum value for the provided list of integers (for which to generate unique random numbers)
Get a maximum value for the provided list of integers
Use ThreadLocalRandom class (from JDK 1.8) to generate random integer values against the previously found min and max integer values and then filter to ensure that the values are indeed contained by the originally provided list. Finally apply distinct to the intstream to ensure that generated numbers are unique.
Here is the function with some description:
/**
* Provided an unsequenced / sequenced list of integers, the function returns unique random IDs as defined by the parameter
* #param numberToGenerate
* #param idList
* #return List of unique random integer values from the provided list
*/
private List<Integer> getUniqueRandomInts(List<Integer> idList, Integer numberToGenerate) {
List<Integer> generatedUniqueIds = new ArrayList<>();
Integer minId = idList.stream().mapToInt (v->v).min().orElseThrow(NoSuchElementException::new);
Integer maxId = idList.stream().mapToInt (v->v).max().orElseThrow(NoSuchElementException::new);
ThreadLocalRandom.current().ints(minId,maxId)
.filter(e->idList.contains(e))
.distinct()
.limit(numberToGenerate)
.forEach(generatedUniqueIds:: add);
return generatedUniqueIds;
}
So that, to get 11 unique random numbers for 'allIntegers' list object, we'll call the function like;
List<Integer> ids = getUniqueRandomInts(allIntegers,11);
The function declares new arrayList 'generatedUniqueIds' and populates with each unique random integer up to the required number before returning.
P.S. ThreadLocalRandom class avoids common seed value in case of concurrent threads.
try this out
public class RandomValueGenerator {
/**
*
*/
private volatile List<Double> previousGenValues = new ArrayList<Double>();
public void init() {
previousGenValues.add(Double.valueOf(0));
}
public String getNextValue() {
Random random = new Random();
double nextValue=0;
while(previousGenValues.contains(Double.valueOf(nextValue))) {
nextValue = random.nextDouble();
}
previousGenValues.add(Double.valueOf(nextValue));
return String.valueOf(nextValue);
}
}
This isn't significantly different from other answers, but I wanted the array of integers in the end:
Integer[] indices = new Integer[n];
Arrays.setAll(indices, i -> i);
Collections.shuffle(Arrays.asList(indices));
return Arrays.stream(indices).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
you can use boolean array to fill the true if value taken else set navigate through boolean array to get value as per given below
package study;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
/*
Created By Sachin Rane on Jul 18, 2018
*/
public class UniqueRandomNumber {
static Boolean[] boolArray;
public static void main(String s[]){
List<Integer> integers = new ArrayList<>();
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
integers.add(i);
}
//get unique random numbers
boolArray = new Boolean[integers.size()+1];
Arrays.fill(boolArray, false);
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
System.out.print(getUniqueRandomNumber(integers) + " ");
}
}
private static int getUniqueRandomNumber(List<Integer> integers) {
int randNum =(int) (Math.random()*integers.size());
if(boolArray[randNum]){
while(boolArray[randNum]){
randNum++;
if(randNum>boolArray.length){
randNum=0;
}
}
boolArray[randNum]=true;
return randNum;
}else {
boolArray[randNum]=true;
return randNum;
}
}
}
This is the most simple method to generate unique random values in a range or from an array.
In this example, I will be using a predefined array but you can adapt this method to generate random numbers as well. First, we will create a sample array to retrieve our data from.
Generate a random number and add it to the new array.
Generate another random number and check if it is already stored in the new array.
If not then add it and continue
else reiterate the step.
ArrayList<Integer> sampleList = new ArrayList<>();
sampleList.add(1);
sampleList.add(2);
sampleList.add(3);
sampleList.add(4);
sampleList.add(5);
sampleList.add(6);
sampleList.add(7);
sampleList.add(8);
Now from the sampleList we will produce five random numbers that are unique.
int n;
randomList = new ArrayList<>();
for(int i=0;i<5;i++){
Random random = new Random();
n=random.nextInt(8); //Generate a random index between 0-7
if(!randomList.contains(sampleList.get(n)))
randomList.add(sampleList.get(n));
else
i--; //reiterating the step
}
This is conceptually very simple. If the random value generated already exists then we will reiterate the step. This will continue until all the values generated are unique.
If you found this answer useful then you can vote it up as it is much simple in concept as compared to the other answers.
Check this
public class RandomNumbers {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
int n = 5;
int A[] = uniqueRandomArray(n);
for(int i = 0; i<n; i++){
System.out.println(A[i]);
}
}
public static int[] uniqueRandomArray(int n){
int [] A = new int[n];
for(int i = 0; i< A.length; ){
if(i == A.length){
break;
}
int b = (int)(Math.random() *n) + 1;
if(f(A,b) == false){
A[i++] = b;
}
}
return A;
}
public static boolean f(int[] A, int n){
for(int i=0; i<A.length; i++){
if(A[i] == n){
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
}
Below is a way I used to generate unique number always. Random function generates number and stores it in textfile then next time it checks it in file compares it and generate new unique number hence in this way there is always a new unique number.
public int GenerateRandomNo()
{
int _min = 0000;
int _max = 9999;
Random _rdm = new Random();
return _rdm.Next(_min, _max);
}
public int rand_num()
{
randnum = GenerateRandomNo();
string createText = randnum.ToString() + Environment.NewLine;
string file_path = System.IO.Path.GetDirectoryName(System.Windows.Forms.Application.ExecutablePath) + #"\Invoices\numbers.txt";
File.AppendAllText(file_path, createText);
int number = File.ReadLines(file_path).Count(); //count number of lines in file
System.IO.StreamReader file = new System.IO.StreamReader(file_path);
do
{
randnum = GenerateRandomNo();
}
while ((file.ReadLine()) == randnum.ToString());
file.Close();
return randnum;
}
You can use the Collections class.
A utility class called Collections offers different actions that can be performed on a collection like an ArrayList (e.g., search the elements, find the maximum or minimum element, reverse the order of elements, and so on). One of the actions it can perform is to shuffle the elements. The shuffle will randomly move each element to a different position in the list. It does this by using a Random object. This means it's deterministic randomness, but it will do in most situations.
To shuffle the ArrayList, add the Collections import to the top of the program and then use the Shuffle static method. It takes the ArrayList to be shuffled as a parameter:
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.ArrayList;
public class Lottery {
public static void main(String[] args) {
//define ArrayList to hold Integer objects
ArrayList numbers = new ArrayList();
for(int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
{
numbers.add(i+1);
}
Collections.shuffle(numbers);
System.out.println(numbers);
}
}
You can generate n unique random number between 0 to n-1 in java
public static void RandomGenerate(int n)
{
Set<Integer> st=new HashSet<Integer>();
Random r=new Random();
while(st.size()<n)
{
st.add(r.nextInt(n));
}
}
I wrote the code, but there is no conversion from double to int.
public class Array {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int i;
int[] ar1 = new int[100];
for(int i = 0; i < ar1.length; i++) {
ar1[i] = int(Math.random() * 100);
System.out.print(ar1[i] + " ");
}
}
}
How can it be corrected?
ar1[i] = (int)(Math.random() * 100);
Conversion in Java looks like cast in C.
It should be like
ar1[i] = (int)(Math.random() * 100);
When you cast, cast type should be in brackets e.g. (cast type)value
Try this:
package studing;
public class Array {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random r = new Random();
int[] ar1 = new int[100];
for(int i = 0; i < ar1.length; i++) {
ar1[i] = r.nextInt(100);
System.out.print(ar1[i] + " ");
}
}
}
Why?
Using Math.random() can return 1, this means Math.random()*100 can return 100, but OP asked for maximum 99! Using nextInt(100) is exclusive 100, it can only return values from 0 to 99.
Math.random() can not return -0.000001 that would be round to 0 and 1.0000001 can not be returned that should round to 1. So you have less chance to get 0 or 99 than all the numbers between. This way it is not realy random, to guess "its not 0 or 99" is more true than "its not 1 or 98".
Also it do not make a detour via casting and mathematic operations you don't realy need, hey you dont need to strictfp on amd-cpus or old intel-cpus.
This is not actually using the java.lang.Math class, but in Java 8 a random array can also be created in this fashion:
int[] random = new Random().ints(100, 0, 100).toArray();
My solution uses Random class instead of Math.random. Here it is.
private static int[] generateArray(int min, int max) { // generate a random size array with random numbers
Random rd = new Random(); // random class will be used
int randomSize = min + rd.nextInt(max); // first decide the array size (randomly, of course)
System.out.println("Random array size: " + randomSize);
int[] array = new int[randomSize]; // create an array of that size
for (int i = 0; i < randomSize; i++) { // iterate over the created array
array[i] = min + rd.nextInt(max); // fill the cells randomly
}
return array;
}
This question already has answers here:
Java - generate Random range of specific numbers without duplication of those numbers - how to?
(6 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
Here's the code I have that solves my problem. But it seems really brute forced. Is there any optimized/elegant way to write this?
System.out.println("\n\nPart II: Let' put in a list of 50 random numbers between 10 to 99. No Duplicates!");
Linkedlist l1 = new Linkedlist();
Random rand = new Random();
for(int i = 0; i < 50; i++){
int num = rand.nextInt(89) + 10;//range between 10 and 99.
while(true){
if(!l1.search(num)){
l1.add(num);
break;
}
else
num = rand.nextInt(89) + 10;//recycle for new num
}//infinite loop until new non-duplicate random value is generated for the list.
}//for
Well there is a more cleaner way to do this that doesn't involve randomizing so much and output rejection. You can populate a List with the numbers you require, in this case:
List<Integer> numberList = new ArrayList<>();
for(int i=11; i<=99; i++){
numberList.add(i);
}
Then shuffle the List and pick first N numbers from it..
Collections.shuffle(numberList);
for(int j=0; j<50; j++){
System.out.println(numberList.get(j));
}
You have to know your set in advance though to be able to populate it.
Bounded Fisher-Yates shuffle. Runtime for the random sampling is linear in the number of elements you need, not the number of elements you're picking from. You don't waste any time shuffling the entire range of elements or rejecting elements that have already been picked.
int[] sample(int sampleSize, int startInclusive, int endExclusive) {
int[] samples = new int[sampleSize];
int[] range = IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive).toArray();
Random random = new Random();
for (int i = 0, j = range.length; i < samples.length; i++) {
int k = random.nextInt(j--);
samples[i] = range[k];
range[k] = range[j];
}
return samples;
}
I would prefer using Set instead of a List as Set will automatically handle duplicates so that we need to worry about eliminating them by our own.
Try this:
Set<Integer> set = new HashSet<Integer>();
Random rand = new Random();
while(true) {
int num = rand.nextInt(89) + 10;// range between 10 and 99.
set.add(num);
if (set.size() == 50) {
break;
}
}
System.out.println(set);
Sets don't allow duplicates:
Set<Integer> s = new HashSet<Integer>();
Random rand = new Random();
while (s.size() < 50) {
int num = rand.nextInt(89) + 10;// range between 10 and 99.
s.add(num);
}
You could just use a Set, which will only allow unique values to be stored in it, this way you could just keep looping while the number of elements is less than 50...
Set<Integer> nums = new HashSet<>(50);
while (nums.size() < 50) {
nums.add((int)(10 + (Math.random() * 89)));
}
for (Integer num : nums) {
System.out.println(num);
}
This is a variation on #AnkurShanbhag's answer (I don't like while (true) loops ;)), so if you like, shoot them credit ;)
package com.project.stackoverflow;
import java.util.Random;
import java.util.Scanner;
import java.util.TreeSet;
public class RandomGenerator {
private Scanner s;
public TreeSet<Integer> compute() {
TreeSet<Integer> generatedList = new TreeSet<Integer>();
s = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("Enter the lower bound for checking random numbers:");
long lowBound = s.nextLong();
System.out.println("Enter the upper bound for checking random numbers:");
long topBound = s.nextLong();
Random randomNumbers = new Random();
for (int i = 0; i < topBound; i++) {
if (generatedList.size() == 5) {
break;
} else {
generatorFunc(lowBound, topBound, randomNumbers, generatedList);
}
}
return generatedList;
}
public void generatorFunc(long lowBound, long topBound, Random randomNumbers, TreeSet<Integer> generatedList) {
long limit = topBound - lowBound;
long part = (long) (limit * randomNumbers.nextDouble());
int randomNum = (int) (part + lowBound);
generatedList.add(randomNum);
}
public void printList() {
TreeSet<Integer> testListVals = compute();
System.out.println("New" + testListVals);
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
RandomGenerator obj = new RandomGenerator();
obj.printList();
}
}
I'm trying to get random numbers between 0 and 100. But I want them to be unique, not repeated in a sequence. For example if I got 5 numbers, they should be 82,12,53,64,32 and not 82,12,53,12,32
I used this, but it generates same numbers in a sequence.
Random rand = new Random();
selected = rand.nextInt(100);
Add each number in the range sequentially in a list structure.
Shuffle it.
Take the first 'n'.
Here is a simple implementation. This will print 3 unique random numbers from the range 1-10.
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collections;
public class UniqueRandomNumbers {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ArrayList<Integer> list = new ArrayList<Integer>();
for (int i=1; i<11; i++) list.add(i);
Collections.shuffle(list);
for (int i=0; i<3; i++) System.out.println(list.get(i));
}
}
The first part of the fix with the original approach, as Mark Byers pointed out in an answer now deleted, is to use only a single Random instance.
That is what is causing the numbers to be identical. A Random instance is seeded by the current time in milliseconds. For a particular seed value, the 'random' instance will return the exact same sequence of pseudo random numbers.
With Java 8+ you can use the ints method of Random to get an IntStream of random values then distinct and limit to reduce the stream to a number of unique random values.
ThreadLocalRandom.current().ints(0, 100).distinct().limit(5).forEach(System.out::println);
Random also has methods which create LongStreams and DoubleStreams if you need those instead.
If you want all (or a large amount) of the numbers in a range in a random order it might be more efficient to add all of the numbers to a list, shuffle it, and take the first n because the above example is currently implemented by generating random numbers in the range requested and passing them through a set (similarly to Rob Kielty's answer), which may require generating many more than the amount passed to limit because the probability of a generating a new unique number decreases with each one found. Here's an example of the other way:
List<Integer> range = IntStream.range(0, 100).boxed()
.collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));
Collections.shuffle(range);
range.subList(0, 99).forEach(System.out::println);
Create an array of 100 numbers, then randomize their order.
Devise a pseudo-random number generator that has a range of 100.
Create a boolean array of 100 elements, then set an element true when you pick that number. When you pick the next number check against the array and try again if the array element is set. (You can make an easy-to-clear boolean array with an array of long where you shift and mask to access individual bits.)
Use Collections.shuffle() on all 100 numbers and select the first five, as shown here and below.
Console:
59 9 68 24 82
Code:
private static final Random rnd = new Random();
private static final int N = 100;
private static final int K = 5;
private static final List<Integer> S = new ArrayList<>(N);
public static void main(String[] args) {
for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) {
S.add(i + 1);
}
Collections.shuffle(S, rnd);
for (int i = 0; i < K; i++) {
System.out.print(S.get(i) + " ");
}
System.out.println();
}
I feel like this method is worth mentioning.
private static final Random RANDOM = new Random();
/**
* Pick n numbers between 0 (inclusive) and k (inclusive)
* While there are very deterministic ways to do this,
* for large k and small n, this could be easier than creating
* an large array and sorting, i.e. k = 10,000
*/
public Set<Integer> pickRandom(int n, int k) {
final Set<Integer> picked = new HashSet<>();
while (picked.size() < n) {
picked.add(RANDOM.nextInt(k + 1));
}
return picked;
}
I re-factored Anand's answer to make use not only of the unique properties of a Set but also use the boolean false returned by the set.add() when an add to the set fails.
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Random;
import java.util.Set;
public class randomUniqueNumberGenerator {
public static final int SET_SIZE_REQUIRED = 10;
public static final int NUMBER_RANGE = 100;
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random random = new Random();
Set set = new HashSet<Integer>(SET_SIZE_REQUIRED);
while(set.size()< SET_SIZE_REQUIRED) {
while (set.add(random.nextInt(NUMBER_RANGE)) != true)
;
}
assert set.size() == SET_SIZE_REQUIRED;
System.out.println(set);
}
}
I have made this like that.
Random random = new Random();
ArrayList<Integer> arrayList = new ArrayList<Integer>();
while (arrayList.size() < 6) { // how many numbers u need - it will 6
int a = random.nextInt(49)+1; // this will give numbers between 1 and 50.
if (!arrayList.contains(a)) {
arrayList.add(a);
}
}
This will work to generate unique random numbers................
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Random;
public class RandomExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random rand = new Random();
int e;
int i;
int g = 10;
HashSet<Integer> randomNumbers = new HashSet<Integer>();
for (i = 0; i < g; i++) {
e = rand.nextInt(20);
randomNumbers.add(e);
if (randomNumbers.size() <= 10) {
if (randomNumbers.size() == 10) {
g = 10;
}
g++;
randomNumbers.add(e);
}
}
System.out.println("Ten Unique random numbers from 1 to 20 are : " + randomNumbers);
}
}
One clever way to do this is to use exponents of a primitive element in modulus.
For example, 2 is a primitive root mod 101, meaning that the powers of 2 mod 101 give you a non-repeating sequence that sees every number from 1 to 100 inclusive:
2^0 mod 101 = 1
2^1 mod 101 = 2
2^2 mod 101 = 4
...
2^50 mod 101 = 100
2^51 mod 101 = 99
2^52 mod 101 = 97
...
2^100 mod 101 = 1
In Java code, you would write:
void randInts() {
int num=1;
for (int ii=0; ii<101; ii++) {
System.out.println(num);
num= (num*2) % 101;
}
}
Finding a primitive root for a specific modulus can be tricky, but Maple's "primroot" function will do this for you.
I have come here from another question, which has been duplicate of this question (Generating unique random number in java)
Store 1 to 100 numbers in an Array.
Generate random number between 1 to 100 as position and return array[position-1] to get the value
Once you use a number in array, mark the value as -1 ( No need to maintain another array to check if this number is already used)
If value in array is -1, get the random number again to fetch new location in array.
I have easy solution for this problem,
With this we can easily generate n number of unique random numbers,
Its just logic anyone can use it in any language.
for(int i=0;i<4;i++)
{
rn[i]= GenerateRandomNumber();
for (int j=0;j<i;j++)
{
if (rn[i] == rn[j])
{
i--;
}
}
}
Choose n unique random numbers from 0 to m-1.
int[] uniqueRand(int n, int m){
Random rand = new Random();
int[] r = new int[n];
int[] result = new int[n];
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++){
r[i] = rand.nextInt(m-i);
result[i] = r[i];
for(int j = i-1; j >= 0; j--){
if(result[i] >= r[j])
result[i]++;
}
}
return result;
}
Imagine a list containing numbers from 0 to m-1. To choose the first number, we simply use rand.nextInt(m). Then remove the number from the list. Now there remains m-1 numbers, so we call rand.nextInt(m-1). The number we get represents the position in the list. If it is less than the first number, then it is the second number, since the part of list prior to the first number wasn't changed by the removal of the first number. If the position is greater than or equal to the first number, the second number is position+1. Do some further derivation, you can get this algorithm.
Explanation
This algorithm has O(n^2) complexity. So it is good for generating small amount of unique numbers from a large set. While the shuffle based algorithm need at least O(m) to do the shuffle.
Also shuffle based algorithm need memory to store every possible outcome to do the shuffle, this algorithm doesn’t need.
Though it's an old thread, but adding another option might not harm. (JDK 1.8 lambda functions seem to make it easy);
The problem could be broken down into the following steps;
Get a minimum value for the provided list of integers (for which to generate unique random numbers)
Get a maximum value for the provided list of integers
Use ThreadLocalRandom class (from JDK 1.8) to generate random integer values against the previously found min and max integer values and then filter to ensure that the values are indeed contained by the originally provided list. Finally apply distinct to the intstream to ensure that generated numbers are unique.
Here is the function with some description:
/**
* Provided an unsequenced / sequenced list of integers, the function returns unique random IDs as defined by the parameter
* #param numberToGenerate
* #param idList
* #return List of unique random integer values from the provided list
*/
private List<Integer> getUniqueRandomInts(List<Integer> idList, Integer numberToGenerate) {
List<Integer> generatedUniqueIds = new ArrayList<>();
Integer minId = idList.stream().mapToInt (v->v).min().orElseThrow(NoSuchElementException::new);
Integer maxId = idList.stream().mapToInt (v->v).max().orElseThrow(NoSuchElementException::new);
ThreadLocalRandom.current().ints(minId,maxId)
.filter(e->idList.contains(e))
.distinct()
.limit(numberToGenerate)
.forEach(generatedUniqueIds:: add);
return generatedUniqueIds;
}
So that, to get 11 unique random numbers for 'allIntegers' list object, we'll call the function like;
List<Integer> ids = getUniqueRandomInts(allIntegers,11);
The function declares new arrayList 'generatedUniqueIds' and populates with each unique random integer up to the required number before returning.
P.S. ThreadLocalRandom class avoids common seed value in case of concurrent threads.
try this out
public class RandomValueGenerator {
/**
*
*/
private volatile List<Double> previousGenValues = new ArrayList<Double>();
public void init() {
previousGenValues.add(Double.valueOf(0));
}
public String getNextValue() {
Random random = new Random();
double nextValue=0;
while(previousGenValues.contains(Double.valueOf(nextValue))) {
nextValue = random.nextDouble();
}
previousGenValues.add(Double.valueOf(nextValue));
return String.valueOf(nextValue);
}
}
This isn't significantly different from other answers, but I wanted the array of integers in the end:
Integer[] indices = new Integer[n];
Arrays.setAll(indices, i -> i);
Collections.shuffle(Arrays.asList(indices));
return Arrays.stream(indices).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
you can use boolean array to fill the true if value taken else set navigate through boolean array to get value as per given below
package study;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
/*
Created By Sachin Rane on Jul 18, 2018
*/
public class UniqueRandomNumber {
static Boolean[] boolArray;
public static void main(String s[]){
List<Integer> integers = new ArrayList<>();
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
integers.add(i);
}
//get unique random numbers
boolArray = new Boolean[integers.size()+1];
Arrays.fill(boolArray, false);
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
System.out.print(getUniqueRandomNumber(integers) + " ");
}
}
private static int getUniqueRandomNumber(List<Integer> integers) {
int randNum =(int) (Math.random()*integers.size());
if(boolArray[randNum]){
while(boolArray[randNum]){
randNum++;
if(randNum>boolArray.length){
randNum=0;
}
}
boolArray[randNum]=true;
return randNum;
}else {
boolArray[randNum]=true;
return randNum;
}
}
}
This is the most simple method to generate unique random values in a range or from an array.
In this example, I will be using a predefined array but you can adapt this method to generate random numbers as well. First, we will create a sample array to retrieve our data from.
Generate a random number and add it to the new array.
Generate another random number and check if it is already stored in the new array.
If not then add it and continue
else reiterate the step.
ArrayList<Integer> sampleList = new ArrayList<>();
sampleList.add(1);
sampleList.add(2);
sampleList.add(3);
sampleList.add(4);
sampleList.add(5);
sampleList.add(6);
sampleList.add(7);
sampleList.add(8);
Now from the sampleList we will produce five random numbers that are unique.
int n;
randomList = new ArrayList<>();
for(int i=0;i<5;i++){
Random random = new Random();
n=random.nextInt(8); //Generate a random index between 0-7
if(!randomList.contains(sampleList.get(n)))
randomList.add(sampleList.get(n));
else
i--; //reiterating the step
}
This is conceptually very simple. If the random value generated already exists then we will reiterate the step. This will continue until all the values generated are unique.
If you found this answer useful then you can vote it up as it is much simple in concept as compared to the other answers.
Check this
public class RandomNumbers {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
int n = 5;
int A[] = uniqueRandomArray(n);
for(int i = 0; i<n; i++){
System.out.println(A[i]);
}
}
public static int[] uniqueRandomArray(int n){
int [] A = new int[n];
for(int i = 0; i< A.length; ){
if(i == A.length){
break;
}
int b = (int)(Math.random() *n) + 1;
if(f(A,b) == false){
A[i++] = b;
}
}
return A;
}
public static boolean f(int[] A, int n){
for(int i=0; i<A.length; i++){
if(A[i] == n){
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
}
Below is a way I used to generate unique number always. Random function generates number and stores it in textfile then next time it checks it in file compares it and generate new unique number hence in this way there is always a new unique number.
public int GenerateRandomNo()
{
int _min = 0000;
int _max = 9999;
Random _rdm = new Random();
return _rdm.Next(_min, _max);
}
public int rand_num()
{
randnum = GenerateRandomNo();
string createText = randnum.ToString() + Environment.NewLine;
string file_path = System.IO.Path.GetDirectoryName(System.Windows.Forms.Application.ExecutablePath) + #"\Invoices\numbers.txt";
File.AppendAllText(file_path, createText);
int number = File.ReadLines(file_path).Count(); //count number of lines in file
System.IO.StreamReader file = new System.IO.StreamReader(file_path);
do
{
randnum = GenerateRandomNo();
}
while ((file.ReadLine()) == randnum.ToString());
file.Close();
return randnum;
}
You can use the Collections class.
A utility class called Collections offers different actions that can be performed on a collection like an ArrayList (e.g., search the elements, find the maximum or minimum element, reverse the order of elements, and so on). One of the actions it can perform is to shuffle the elements. The shuffle will randomly move each element to a different position in the list. It does this by using a Random object. This means it's deterministic randomness, but it will do in most situations.
To shuffle the ArrayList, add the Collections import to the top of the program and then use the Shuffle static method. It takes the ArrayList to be shuffled as a parameter:
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.ArrayList;
public class Lottery {
public static void main(String[] args) {
//define ArrayList to hold Integer objects
ArrayList numbers = new ArrayList();
for(int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
{
numbers.add(i+1);
}
Collections.shuffle(numbers);
System.out.println(numbers);
}
}
You can generate n unique random number between 0 to n-1 in java
public static void RandomGenerate(int n)
{
Set<Integer> st=new HashSet<Integer>();
Random r=new Random();
while(st.size()<n)
{
st.add(r.nextInt(n));
}
}