A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/Random.html below:

class Random - Documentation for Ruby 3.5

class Random

Random provides an interface to Ruby’s pseudo-random number generator, or PRNG. The PRNG produces a deterministic sequence of bits which approximate true randomness. The sequence may be represented by integers, floats, or binary strings.

The generator may be initialized with either a system-generated or user-supplied seed value by using Random.srand.

The class method Random.rand provides the base functionality of Kernel.rand along with better handling of floating point values. These are both interfaces to the Ruby system PRNG.

Random.new will create a new PRNG with a state independent of the Ruby system PRNG, allowing multiple generators with different seed values or sequence positions to exist simultaneously. Random objects can be marshaled, allowing sequences to be saved and resumed.

PRNGs are currently implemented as a modified Mersenne Twister with a period of 2**19937-1. As this algorithm is not for cryptographical use, you must use SecureRandom for security purpose, instead of this PRNG.

See also Random::Formatter module that adds convenience methods to generate various forms of random data.

Public Class Methods

Source

static VALUE
random_s_bytes(VALUE obj, VALUE len)
{
    rb_random_t *rnd = rand_start(default_rand());
    return rand_bytes(&random_mt_if, rnd, NUM2LONG(rb_to_int(len)));
}

Returns a random binary string. The argument size specifies the length of the returned string.

Source

static VALUE
random_init(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    rb_random_t *rnd = try_get_rnd(obj);
    const rb_random_interface_t *rng = rb_rand_if(obj);

    if (!rng) {
        rb_raise(rb_eTypeError, "undefined random interface: %s",
                 RTYPEDDATA_TYPE(obj)->wrap_struct_name);
    }

    unsigned int major = rng->version.major;
    unsigned int minor = rng->version.minor;
    if (major != RUBY_RANDOM_INTERFACE_VERSION_MAJOR) {
        rb_raise(rb_eTypeError, "Random interface version "
                 STRINGIZE(RUBY_RANDOM_INTERFACE_VERSION_MAJOR) "."
                 STRINGIZE(RUBY_RANDOM_INTERFACE_VERSION_MINOR) " "
                 "expected: %d.%d", major, minor);
    }
    argc = rb_check_arity(argc, 0, 1);
    rb_check_frozen(obj);
    if (argc == 0) {
        rnd->seed = rand_init_default(rng, rnd);
    }
    else {
        rnd->seed = rand_init(rng, rnd, rb_to_int(argv[0]));
    }
    return obj;
}

Creates a new PRNG using seed to set the initial state. If seed is omitted, the generator is initialized with Random.new_seed.

See Random.srand for more information on the use of seed values.

Source

static VALUE
random_seed(VALUE _)
{
    VALUE v;
    with_random_seed(DEFAULT_SEED_CNT, 1, true) {
        v = make_seed_value(seedbuf, DEFAULT_SEED_CNT);
    }
    return v;
}

Returns an arbitrary seed value. This is used by Random.new when no seed value is specified as an argument.

Random.new_seed  

Source

static VALUE
random_s_rand(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    VALUE v = rand_random(argc, argv, Qnil, rand_start(default_rand()));
    check_random_number(v, argv);
    return v;
}

Returns a random number using the Ruby system PRNG.

See also Random#rand.

Source

static VALUE
random_s_seed(VALUE obj)
{
    rb_random_mt_t *rnd = rand_mt_start(default_rand());
    return rnd->base.seed;
}

Returns the seed value used to initialize the Ruby system PRNG. This may be used to initialize another generator with the same state at a later time, causing it to produce the same sequence of numbers.

Random.seed      
prng1 = Random.new(Random.seed)
prng1.seed       
prng1.rand(100)  
Random.seed      
Random.rand(100) 

Source

static VALUE
rb_f_srand(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    VALUE seed, old;
    rb_random_mt_t *r = rand_mt_start(default_rand());

    if (rb_check_arity(argc, 0, 1) == 0) {
        seed = random_seed(obj);
    }
    else {
        seed = rb_to_int(argv[0]);
    }
    old = r->base.seed;
    rand_init(&random_mt_if, &r->base, seed);
    r->base.seed = seed;

    return old;
}

Seeds the system pseudo-random number generator, with number. The previous seed value is returned.

If number is omitted, seeds the generator using a source of entropy provided by the operating system, if available (/dev/urandom on Unix systems or the RSA cryptographic provider on Windows), which is then combined with the time, the process id, and a sequence number.

srand may be used to ensure repeatable sequences of pseudo-random numbers between different runs of the program. By setting the seed to a known value, programs can be made deterministic during testing.

srand 1234               
[ rand, rand ]           
[ rand(10), rand(1000) ] 
srand 1234               
[ rand, rand ]           

Source

static VALUE
random_raw_seed(VALUE self, VALUE size)
{
    long n = NUM2ULONG(size);
    VALUE buf = rb_str_new(0, n);
    if (n == 0) return buf;
    if (fill_random_bytes(RSTRING_PTR(buf), n, TRUE))
        rb_raise(rb_eRuntimeError, "failed to get urandom");
    return buf;
}

Returns a string, using platform providing features. Returned value is expected to be a cryptographically secure pseudo-random number in binary form. This method raises a RuntimeError if the feature provided by platform failed to prepare the result.

In 2017, Linux manpage random(7) writes that “no cryptographic primitive available today can hope to promise more than 256 bits of security”. So it might be questionable to pass size > 32 to this method.

Random.urandom(8)  
Public Instance Methods

Source

static VALUE
rand_mt_equal(VALUE self, VALUE other)
{
    rb_random_mt_t *r1, *r2;
    if (rb_obj_class(self) != rb_obj_class(other)) return Qfalse;
    r1 = get_rnd_mt(self);
    r2 = get_rnd_mt(other);
    if (memcmp(r1->mt.state, r2->mt.state, sizeof(r1->mt.state))) return Qfalse;
    if ((r1->mt.next - r1->mt.state) != (r2->mt.next - r2->mt.state)) return Qfalse;
    if (r1->mt.left != r2->mt.left) return Qfalse;
    return rb_equal(r1->base.seed, r2->base.seed);
}

Returns true if the two generators have the same internal state, otherwise false. Equivalent generators will return the same sequence of pseudo-random numbers. Two generators will generally have the same state only if they were initialized with the same seed

Random.new == Random.new             
Random.new(1234) == Random.new(1234) 

and have the same invocation history.

prng1 = Random.new(1234)
prng2 = Random.new(1234)
prng1 == prng2 

prng1.rand     
prng1 == prng2 

prng2.rand     
prng1 == prng2 

Source

static VALUE
random_bytes(VALUE obj, VALUE len)
{
    rb_random_t *rnd = try_get_rnd(obj);
    return rand_bytes(rb_rand_if(obj), rnd, NUM2LONG(rb_to_int(len)));
}

Returns a random binary string containing size bytes.

random_string = Random.new.bytes(10) 
random_string.size                   

Source

static VALUE
random_rand(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    VALUE v = rand_random(argc, argv, obj, try_get_rnd(obj));
    check_random_number(v, argv);
    return v;
}

When max is an Integer, rand returns a random integer greater than or equal to zero and less than max. Unlike Kernel.rand, when max is a negative integer or zero, rand raises an ArgumentError.

prng = Random.new
prng.rand(100)       

When max is a Float, rand returns a random floating point number between 0.0 and max, including 0.0 and excluding max.

prng.rand(1.5)       

When range is a Range, rand returns a random number where range.member?(number) == true.

prng.rand(5..9)      
prng.rand(5...9)     
prng.rand(5.0..9.0)  
prng.rand(5.0...9.0) 

Both the beginning and ending values of the range must respond to subtract (-) and add (+)methods, or rand will raise an ArgumentError.

Source

static VALUE
random_get_seed(VALUE obj)
{
    return get_rnd(obj)->seed;
}

Returns the seed value used to initialize the generator. This may be used to initialize another generator with the same state at a later time, causing it to produce the same sequence of numbers.

prng1 = Random.new(1234)
prng1.seed       
prng1.rand(100)  

prng2 = Random.new(prng1.seed)
prng2.rand(100)  

RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4