23

I need your help with a little problem. I have four labels and I want to display on them random value between 0 to 100, and the sum of them must be 100.

This is my code :

private void randomly_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    double alpha = 0, beta = 0, gamma = 0, delta = 0;
    double temp;
    int tempDouble;

    Random rnd = new Random();

    alpha = rnd.Next(0, 100);

    temp = 100 - alpha;
    tempDouble = (int)temp;
    beta = rnd.Next(0, tempDouble);

    temp = 100 - (alpha + beta);
    tempDouble = (int)temp;
    gamma = rnd.Next(0, tempDouble);

    temp = 100 - (alpha + beta + gamma);
    tempDouble = (int)temp;
    delta = rnd.Next(0, tempDouble);

    temp = alpha + beta + delta + gamma;
    temp = 100 - temp;
    temp = temp / 4;

    alpha = alpha + temp;
    beta = beta + temp;
    gamma = gamma + temp;
    delta = delta + temp;

    cInsertion.Text = alpha.ToString();
    cMoyens.Text = beta.ToString();
    cInternational.Text = gamma.ToString();
    cRecherche.Text = delta.ToString();
}   

The problem is that I'm giving to the alpha the chance to have the biggest value, and for delta the lowest value.

Is there any way to give them all the same chance to have a real random value?

1
  • A real random number? In short, no. Only a pseudo-random number. The random number generator operates off clock cycles and it is typical to see repeated sequences. The seed used depends on the .Tick property of the current DateTime.Now (if I remember correctly). There are a lot of decent random number generators and APIs for .Net.I would recommend searching for those if you feel like you don't have the time or desire to put into rolling your own.
    – IAbstract
    Apr 30, 2011 at 16:00

6 Answers 6

46

You could do something like this:

double alpha = 0, beta = 0, gamma = 0, delta = 0, k = 0;
Random rnd = new Random();

alpha = rnd.Next(0, 100);
beta = rnd.Next(0, 100);
gamma = rnd.Next(0, 100);
delta = rnd.Next(0, 100);

k = (alpha + beta + gamma + delta) / 100;

alpha /= k;
beta /= k;
gamma /= k;
delta /= k;

cInsertion.Text = alpha.ToString();
cMoyens.Text = beta.ToString();
cInternational.Text = gamma.ToString();
cRecherche.Text = delta.ToString();

This way you're saying let's take a random value for all 4 variables, and then we'll scale them by a factor k that'll make their sum be 100.

0
6

What if you stick all four values in an array, then shuffle them, then assign them according to their ordinal position? That way each variable (gamma, theta, etc.) has equal probability of getting a high vs low number.

1
  • 1
    This gives all four values the same distribution, but it's a very weird distribution.
    – Ben Voigt
    Apr 30, 2011 at 16:16
0

It's a very interesting problem. I like @Ivan_Ferić's solution, I think, it's perfect, but I have another idea:

int total = 100;
Random rand = new Random();

int half = rand.next(0,total);   // the line

a = rand.Next(0,half);
b = max - a;
c = rand.Next(0,half);
d = max - c;

(Not tested, maybe +/-1 must be added to some of vars.) Also, you may shuffle values.

The interesting part is coming now. If we change "the line":

min = <some_value>
max = <another_value>;
int half = rand.next(min,max);

...then we can finetune the result:

  • min = 0; max = 100: original;
  • min = 20; max = 80: avoid little numbers;
  • min = 33; max = 100: force two numbers to be less than 32.
1
  • Even when min=0, max=100, this is not the same as Ivan's solution because if half < 5, say, which happens 5% of the time, then two numbers will sum to less than 5. For that to happen in Ivan's solution, two numbers would have to be less than 5, and two would have be greater than 50, which only happens 3/8 of a percent of the time.
    – Neil G
    Apr 30, 2011 at 17:48
0

Instead of generating the individual numbers randomly, generate the partial sums, then calculate the parts:

double alpha, beta, gama, delta = 0;

var rnd = new System.Random();
var cuts = new List<double>();

cuts.Add(Math.Floor(rnd.Next(0, 101)));
cuts.Add(Math.Floor(rnd.Next(0, 101)));
cuts.Add(Math.Floor(rnd.Next(0, 101)));

cuts.Sort();

alpha = cuts[0];
beta = cuts[1] - cuts[0];
gamma = cuts[2] - cuts[1];
delta = 100 - cuts[2];
3
  • +1 Why was this even downvoted? In fact thats a good solution that doesnt have to rely on divisions/multiplications. Jun 26, 2012 at 13:45
  • 1
    Thanks @Philip. One would normally expect tricks learnt in grad-level probability and statistics classes to compare favorably with off-the-cuff solutions, but I guess naive voters prefer the naive solutions they would have proposed themselves.
    – Ben Voigt
    Jun 26, 2012 at 14:09
  • I would very much doubt that alpha and delta have the same distribution as beta and gamma, unlike Ivan's.
    – gnasher729
    Mar 30, 2014 at 17:05
0

If the numbers that you want represent probabilities of mutually exclusive outcomes, you can imagine them as a multinomial distribution. Since you want a random probability vector, you should sample that from the conjugate prior of the multinomial distribution: the Dirichlet distribution.

In code, you just what Ivan suggested, except that alpha, beta, gamma, and delta should all be drawn from Gamma distributions with shape paramaters alpha_shape, beta_shape, gamma_shape, and delta_shape respective. (Let the other parameter of the Gamma distribution be 1.) These shape parameters control the expected relative proportions.

-2

A real random number? In short, no. Only a pseudo-random number.

The random number generator operates off clock cycles and it is typical to see repeated sequences. The seed used depends on the .Tick property of the current DateTime.Now (if I remember correctly). There are a lot of decent random number generators and APIs for .Net.I would recommend searching for those if you feel like you don't have the time or desire to put into rolling your own.

Moved up to comments as it seems more appropriate.

5
  • ...the problem with the standard P-RNG is that it will execute with little to no deviation because of the cyclic nature of the clock.
    – IAbstract
    Apr 30, 2011 at 15:22
  • @finnw: no it's not: "Is there any way to give them all the same chance to have a real random value."
    – IAbstract
    Apr 30, 2011 at 15:56
  • @finnw: initially, when I wrote my answer his title was: Generate random value
    – IAbstract
    Apr 30, 2011 at 15:59
  • @IAbstract, I am fairly sure the OP meant "can all four variables have the same distribution" (yes) or "can all four variables be uniformly distributed if considered independently?" (no, but that's not because of the determinism of PRNGs.)
    – finnw
    Apr 30, 2011 at 16:16
  • You can click the little “delete” link on this answer to get the rep back that you lost from the downvotes.
    – Timwi
    Apr 30, 2011 at 16:21

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