3

I am trying to generate 64 bit random numbers using the following code. I want the numbers in binary,but the problem is I cant get all the bits to vary. I want the numbers to vary as much as possible

void PrintDoubleAsCBytes(double d, FILE* f)
{

f = fopen("tb.txt","a");

  unsigned char a[sizeof(d)];
  unsigned i;
  memcpy(a, &d, sizeof(d));
  for (i = 0; i < sizeof(a); i++){
    fprintf(f, "%0*X", (CHAR_BIT + 3) / 4, a[sizeof(d)-1-i]);

  }
   fprintf(f,"\n");
 fclose(f); /*done!*/
}

int main (int argc, char *argv)
{

int limit = 100 ;
double a, b;                
double result;
int i ;           
printf("limit = %d", limit );

for (i= 0 ; i< limit;i++)
    {
    a= rand();
    b= rand();
    result = a * b;
    printf ("A= %f B = %f\n",a,b);
    printf ("result= %f\n",result);
    PrintDoubleAsCBytes(a, stdout); puts("");
    PrintDoubleAsCBytes(b, stdout); puts("");
    PrintDoubleAsCBytes(result, stdout); puts("");

    }
}

OUTPUT FILE

41DAE2D159C00000        //Last bits remain zero, I want them to change as well as in case of the result
41C93D91E3000000
43B534EE7FAEB1C3
41D90F261A400000
41D98CD21CC00000
43C4021C95228080
41DD2C3714400000
41B9495CFF000000
43A70D6CAD0EE321

How do I do I achieve this?I do not have much experience in software coding

13
  • 4
    Generating a random binary floating-point number is nontrivial. Most of the popular obvious techniques out there (e.g. generating a random integer in the range [0, 2^53) and then dividing by 2^53) are subtly wrong. The correct algorithm is given here: allendowney.com/research/rand His algorithm only generates numbers in the half-open interval [0, 1), but you can safely scale the result to whatever interval is required.
    – zwol
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:05
  • @Zack He wants to generate a random 64 bit integer, not a random floating point number.
    – Patashu
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:06
  • So dou you want a randomized floating point number or just 64 random bits?
    – Detheroc
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:07
  • @Patashu I see double in the code, not uint64_t. Maybe that's another mistake.
    – zwol
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:07
  • I want 64bit randomized Floating Point number, not just 64 random bits. I add the first two floating point numbers to get the answer and verify using my hardware
    – chitranna
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:11

3 Answers 3

3

In Java it is very easy:

Random rng = new Random(); //do this only once

long randLong = rng.NextLong();
double randDoubleFromBits = Double.longBitsToDouble(randLong);

In C I only know of a hack way to do it :)


Since RAND_MAX can be as low as 2^15-1 but is implementation defined, maybe you can get 64 random bits out of rand() by doing masks and bitshifts:

//seed program once at the start
srand(time(NULL));

uint64_t a = rand()&0x7FFF;
uint64_t b = rand()&0x7FFF;
uint64_t c = rand()&0x7FFF;
uint64_t d = rand()&0x7FFF;
uint64_t e = rand()&0x7FFF;
uint64_t random = (a<<60)+(b<<45)+(c<<30)+(d<<15)+e;

Then stuff it in a union and use the other member of the union to interpret its bits as a double. Something like

union
{
    double d;
    long l;
} doubleOrLong;

doubleOrLong.l = random;
double randomDouble = doubleOrLong.d;

(I haven't tested this code)


EDIT: Explanation of how it should work

First, srand(time(NULL)); seeds rand with the current timestamp. So you only need to do this once at the start, and if you want to reproduce an earlier RNG series you can reuse that seed if you like.

rand() returns a random, unbiased integer between 0 and RAND_MAX inclusive. RAND_MAX is guaranteed to be at least 2^15-1, which is 0x7FFF. To write the program such that it doesn't matter what RAND_MAX is (for example, it could be 2^16-1, 2^31-1, 2^32-1...), we mask out all but the bottom 15 bits - 0x7FFF is 0111 1111 1111 1111 in binary, or the bottom 15 bits.

Now we have to pack all of our 15 random bits into 64 bits. The bitshift operator, <<, shifts the left operand (right operand) bits to the left. So the final uint64_t we call random has random bits derived from the other variables like so:

aaaa bbbb bbbb bbbb bbbc cccc cccc cccc ccdd dddd dddd dddd deee eeee eeee eeee

But this is still being treated as a uint64_t, not as a double. It's undefined behaviour to do so, so you should make sure it works the way you expect on your compiler of choice, but if you put this uint64_t in a union and then read the union's other double member, then you'll (hopefully!) interpret those same bits as a double made up of random bits.

19
  • You need (((uint64_t)rand()) << 32) + rand() or the left shift will not do what you intended here.
    – zwol
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:10
  • RAND_MAX is guaranteed to be at least 2^15-1 and it is exactly that in my compiler.
    – Detheroc
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:11
  • @undefined behaviour Is there a better way?
    – Patashu
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:26
  • 2
    @Patashu "Interpreting the bits of an uint64_t as though it were the bits of a double" would also be invoking undefined behaviour.
    – autistic
    Apr 24, 2013 at 3:31
  • 1
    @undefinedbehaviour “Using a different member of a union is undefined behaviour.” No, Using unions for type-punning is explicitly allowed by C99 TC3 footnote 82. Apr 24, 2013 at 5:09
1

Depending on your platform, but assuming IEEE 754, e.g. Wikipedia, why not explicitly handle the internal double format?

(Barring mistakes), this generates random but valid doubles. [ Haven't quite covered all bases here, e.g. case where exp = 0 or 0x7ff ]

double randomDouble()
{
    uint64_t buf = 0ull;

    // sign bit
    bool odd = rand()%2 > 0;
    if (odd)
        buf  = 1ull<<63;

    // exponent

    int exponentLength = 11;

    int exponentMask = (1 << exponentLength) - 1;

    int exponentLocation = 63 - exponentLength;

    uint64_t exponent = rand()&exponentMask;

    buf += exponent << exponentLocation;

    // fraction

    int fractionLength = exponentLocation;
    int fractionMask  = (1 << exponentLocation) - 1;

    // Courtesy of Patashu

    uint64_t a = rand()&0x7FFF;
    uint64_t b = rand()&0x7FFF;
    uint64_t c = rand()&0x7FFF;
    uint64_t d = rand()&0x7FFF;

    uint64_t fraction = (a<<45)+(b<<30)+(c<<15)+d;
    fraction = fraction& fractionMask;
    buf += fraction;

    double* res = reinterpret_cast<double*>(&buf);
    return *res;
}
4
  • The question was tagged as C, not C++. Apr 24, 2013 at 5:41
  • @Alexey Frunze It was, but confusingly in the comments in the question the OP says that he is fine if it's in C++ or Java. (Not sure if that means it can be implemented in C++ or Java, or that if he reads it in C++ or Java he'll understand what you're doing...)
    – Patashu
    Apr 24, 2013 at 5:43
  • I just need to generate a few million test cases on to a file to run my hardware simulation.
    – chitranna
    Apr 24, 2013 at 5:53
  • How did you arrive at a few million? Apr 24, 2013 at 6:32
0

Use could use this:

void GenerateRandomDouble(double* d)
{
  unsigned char* p = (unsigned char*)d;
  unsigned i;
  for (i = 0; i < sizeof(d); i++)
    p[i] = rand();
}

The problem with this method is that your C program may be unable to use some of the values returned by this function, because they're invalid or special floating point values.

But if you're testing your hardware, you could generate random bytes and feed them directly into said hardware without first converting them into a double.

The only place where you need to treat these random bytes as a double is the point of validation of the results returned by the hardware.

At that point you need to look at the bytes and see if they represent a valid value. If they do, you can memcpy() the bytes into a double and use it.

The next problem to deal with is overflows/underflows and exceptions resulting from whatever you need to do with these random doubles (addition, multiplication, etc). You need to figure out how to deal with them on your platform (compiler+CPU+OS), whether or not you can safely and reliably detect them.

But that looks like a separate question and it has probably already been asked and answered.

2
  • Is there anyway I can concatenate the two numbers make a larger sum ? and reuse the code I got it from you ?
    – chitranna
    Apr 24, 2013 at 5:58
  • What two numbers? Of what type? What do you mean exactly by "concatenate"? Larger than what? Apr 24, 2013 at 6:29

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.