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How do I generate a random number between 0 and n?

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18 Answers 18

995

Use rand(range)

From Ruby Random Numbers:

If you needed a random integer to simulate a roll of a six-sided die, you'd use: 1 + rand(6). A roll in craps could be simulated with 2 + rand(6) + rand(6).

Finally, if you just need a random float, just call rand with no arguments.


As Marc-André Lafortune mentions in his answer below (go upvote it), Ruby 1.9.2 has its own Random class (that Marc-André himself helped to debug, hence the 1.9.2 target for that feature).

For instance, in this game where you need to guess 10 numbers, you can initialize them with:

10.times.map{ 20 + Random.rand(11) } 
#=> [26, 26, 22, 20, 30, 26, 23, 23, 25, 22]

Note:

This is why the equivalent of Random.new.rand(20..30) would be 20 + Random.rand(11), since Random.rand(int) returns “a random integer greater than or equal to zero and less than the argument.” 20..30 includes 30, I need to come up with a random number between 0 and 11, excluding 11.

11
  • 2
    Isn't this terribly non-ruby-like? I thought everything is an object, least-surprise and that... Jan 26, 2010 at 18:50
  • 1
    @yar: It is a bit "perlish". Now Ruby has it's Random class (see my answer) May 5, 2010 at 14:02
  • 2
    @VonC ah :) sorry if i was a bit harsh, it just surprised me
    – horseyguy
    Jun 27, 2011 at 11:10
  • 1
    Random.rand does accept a range, actually. (Since 1.9.3, I believe.)
    – Ajedi32
    Jan 2, 2015 at 19:56
  • 1
    @DanRosenstark: 8 years later... method(:rand) outputs #<Method: Object(Kernel)#rand>. So rand is a Kernel method, available to every Object. You can call self.send(:rand, 0..10) if it makes you feel better. Mar 12, 2018 at 10:15
612

While you can use rand(42-10) + 10 to get a random number between 10 and 42 (where 10 is inclusive and 42 exclusive), there's a better way since Ruby 1.9.3, where you are able to call:

rand(10...42) # => 13

Available for all versions of Ruby by requiring my backports gem.

Ruby 1.9.2 also introduced the Random class so you can create your own random number generator objects and has a nice API:

r = Random.new
r.rand(10...42) # => 22
r.bytes(3) # => "rnd"

The Random class itself acts as a random generator, so you call directly:

Random.rand(10...42) # => same as rand(10...42)

Notes on Random.new

In most cases, the simplest is to use rand or Random.rand. Creating a new random generator each time you want a random number is a really bad idea. If you do this, you will get the random properties of the initial seeding algorithm which are atrocious compared to the properties of the random generator itself.

If you use Random.new, you should thus call it as rarely as possible, for example once as MyApp::Random = Random.new and use it everywhere else.

The cases where Random.new is helpful are the following:

  • you are writing a gem and don't want to interfere with the sequence of rand/Random.rand that the main programs might be relying on
  • you want separate reproducible sequences of random numbers (say one per thread)
  • you want to be able to save and resume a reproducible sequence of random numbers (easy as Random objects can marshalled)
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  • 1
    Excellent! +1. I have completed my own answer to reflect that new feature (and mentioning your contribution with Bug #3104 ;) ).
    – VonC
    May 5, 2010 at 14:20
  • 1
    @yar: My backports gem is simply a collection of methods that are new to RUby 1.8.7, 1.9.1, 1.9.2, but implemented in Ruby. I use RubySpec to insure that the results are compatible with Ruby. May 5, 2010 at 15:16
  • @Marc-André Lafortune, thanks for that. It's always been strange to me how much of Ruby is implemented in non-Ruby (C or whatever) due to speed requirements. But them's the breaks May 5, 2010 at 16:01
  • 5
    Random.rand(10..42) does not work. The Random.rand class method does not accept a range. (Ruby 1.9.2p180)
    – horseyguy
    Jun 27, 2011 at 7:46
  • 1
    @banister: wow, I was convinced that the new api (rand with range, bytes, etc...) was available directly through the Random object. rand with range will be in 1.9.3, and I'll make a feature request for bytes. I've edited my answer Jun 27, 2011 at 14:20
49

If you're not only seeking for a number but also hex or uuid it's worth mentioning that the SecureRandom module found its way from ActiveSupport to the ruby core in 1.9.2+. So without the need for a full blown framework:

require 'securerandom'

p SecureRandom.random_number(100) #=> 15
p SecureRandom.random_number(100) #=> 88

p SecureRandom.random_number #=> 0.596506046187744
p SecureRandom.random_number #=> 0.350621695741409

p SecureRandom.hex #=> "eb693ec8252cd630102fd0d0fb7c3485"

It's documented here: Ruby 1.9.3 - Module: SecureRandom (lib/securerandom.rb)

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  • What about if you need 4 digits random number? Feb 1, 2014 at 22:12
  • 1
    onurozgurozkan I presume SecureRandom.random_number(1000..9999)
    – JayTarka
    Aug 9, 2015 at 2:59
  • 1
    SecureRandom.random_number() doesn't take a range, so no. You would probably want something like SecureRandom.random_number(10_000) (for 0-9999) or SecureRandom.random_number(9_000)+1_000 (for 1000-9999).
    – mwp
    Oct 27, 2015 at 17:38
  • 1
    Random.rand(1000..9999) Jun 25, 2016 at 21:57
39

You can generate a random number with the rand method. The argument passed to the rand method should be an integer or a range, and returns a corresponding random number within the range:

rand(9)       # this generates a number between 0 to 8
rand(0 .. 9)  # this generates a number between 0 to 9
rand(1 .. 50) # this generates a number between 1 to 50
#rand(m .. n) # m is the start of the number range, n is the end of number range
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  • I think using your rand(1..6) reads clearer than the top answer's rand(6)+1. Jun 12, 2014 at 9:05
22

Well, I figured it out. Apparently there is a builtin (?) function called rand:

rand(n + 1)

If someone answers with a more detailed answer, I'll mark that as the correct answer.

1
17

What about this?

n = 3
(0..n).to_a.sample
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  • 3
    It should be noted that generating an array of numbers like this solution provides has terrible performance on large ranges as it's O(n) while rand is O(1).
    – Travis
    Feb 23, 2017 at 14:01
15

Simplest answer to the question:

rand(0..n)
11

You can simply use random_number.

If a positive integer is given as n, random_number returns an integer: 0 <= random_number < n.

Use it like this:

any_number = SecureRandom.random_number(100) 

The output will be any number between 0 and 100.

6
rand(6)    #=> gives a random number between 0 and 6 inclusively 
rand(1..6) #=> gives a random number between 1 and 6 inclusively

Note that the range option is only available in newer(1.9+ I believe) versions of ruby.

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  • I believe the range option is only available in ruby 1.9.3+. It didn't work in 1.9.2 when I tried at least.
    – Batkins
    Dec 13, 2012 at 21:24
6

range = 10..50

rand(range)

or

range.to_a.sample

or

range.to_a.shuffle(this will shuffle whole array and you can pick a random number by first or last or any from this array to pick random one)

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  • 1
    range.to_a.sample is an awful idea when the sample is big.
    – Greg
    May 21, 2019 at 11:16
5

you can do rand(range)

x = rand(1..5)
4

This link is going to be helpful regarding this;

http://ruby-doc.org/core-1.9.3/Random.html

And some more clarity below over the random numbers in ruby;

Generate an integer from 0 to 10

puts (rand() * 10).to_i

Generate a number from 0 to 10 In a more readable way

puts rand(10)

Generate a number from 10 to 15 Including 15

puts rand(10..15)

Non-Random Random Numbers

Generate the same sequence of numbers every time the program is run

srand(5)

Generate 10 random numbers

puts (0..10).map{rand(0..10)}
1
4

Easy way to get random number in ruby is,

def random    
  (1..10).to_a.sample.to_s
end
2

Maybe it help you. I use this in my app

https://github.com/rubyworks/facets
class String

  # Create a random String of given length, using given character set
  #
  # Character set is an Array which can contain Ranges, Arrays, Characters
  #
  # Examples
  #
  #     String.random
  #     => "D9DxFIaqR3dr8Ct1AfmFxHxqGsmA4Oz3"
  #
  #     String.random(10)
  #     => "t8BIna341S"
  #
  #     String.random(10, ['a'..'z'])
  #     => "nstpvixfri"
  #
  #     String.random(10, ['0'..'9'] )
  #     => "0982541042"
  #
  #     String.random(10, ['0'..'9','A'..'F'] )
  #     => "3EBF48AD3D"
  #
  #     BASE64_CHAR_SET =  ["A".."Z", "a".."z", "0".."9", '_', '-']
  #     String.random(10, BASE64_CHAR_SET)
  #     => "xM_1t3qcNn"
  #
  #     SPECIAL_CHARS = ["!", "@", "#", "$", "%", "^", "&", "*", "(", ")", "-", "_", "=", "+", "|", "/", "?", ".", ",", ";", ":", "~", "`", "[", "]", "{", "}", "<", ">"]
  #     BASE91_CHAR_SET =  ["A".."Z", "a".."z", "0".."9", SPECIAL_CHARS]
  #     String.random(10, BASE91_CHAR_SET)
  #      => "S(Z]z,J{v;"
  #
  # CREDIT: Tilo Sloboda
  #
  # SEE: https://gist.github.com/tilo/3ee8d94871d30416feba
  #
  # TODO: Move to random.rb in standard library?

  def self.random(len=32, character_set = ["A".."Z", "a".."z", "0".."9"])
    chars = character_set.map{|x| x.is_a?(Range) ? x.to_a : x }.flatten
    Array.new(len){ chars.sample }.join
  end

end

https://github.com/rubyworks/facets/blob/5569b03b4c6fd25897444a266ffe25872284be2b/lib/core/facets/string/random.rb

It works fine for me

2

How about this one?

num = Random.new
num.rand(1..n)
1

Don't forget to seed the RNG with srand() first.

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  • 2
    What happens if you don't call srand()?
    – Alex B
    Oct 17, 2008 at 14:18
  • 21
    srand is automatically called with the seed being from the current time if it wasn't already called.
    – Julian H
    Feb 6, 2010 at 9:25
1

Try array#shuffle method for randomization

array = (1..10).to_a
array.shuffle.first
1
  • 1
    If you must make an entire array, at least replace .shuffle.first with .sample! Sep 18, 2019 at 19:47
0

You can use ruby rand method for this like below:

rand(n+1)

You need to use n+1 as the rand method returns any random number greater than or equal to 0 but less than the passed parameter value.

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