There are two principal means of generating random (really pseudo-random) numbers:
the Random class generates random integers, doubles, longs and so on, in various ranges.
the static method Math.random generates doubles between 0 (inclusive) and 1 (exclusive).
To generate random integers:
do not use Math.random (it produces doubles, not integers)
use the Random class to generate random integers between 0 and N.
To generate a series of random numbers as a unit, you need to use a single Random object - do not create a new Random object for each new random number.
Other alternatives are:
SecureRandom, a cryptographically strong subclass of Random
ThreadLocalRandom, intended for multi-threaded cases
import java.util.Random;
/** Generate 10 random integers in the range 0..99. */
public final class RandomInteger {
public static final void main(String... aArgs){
log("Generating 10 random integers in range 0..99.");
//note a single Random object is reused here
Random randomGenerator = new Random();
for (int idx = 1; idx <= 10; ++idx){
int randomInt = randomGenerator.nextInt(100);
log("Generated : " + randomInt);
}
log("Done.");
}
private static void log(String aMessage){
System.out.println(aMessage);
}
}