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Implementing Hangman. I want to randomly select the length of the word, taking into account how many words of a given length are in the wordlist - ie. 12-letter words should be chosen less frequently than 5-letter ones, because there are fewer of the former.

It doesn't look like the random module will do that easily.

I could hack something semi-ugly together, but am looking for suggestions of a tidy way to do it.

UPDATE to remove some confusion:

This is a cheating version of hangman: it specifies a word-length at the beginning, but doesn't actually pick the word until it absolutely has to.

Here's the full problem description (from Chapter 8 of the book Think Like a Programmer):

Write a program that will be Player 1 in a text-based version of hangman (that is, you don't actually have to draw a hanged man—just keep track of the number of incorrect guesses). Player 2 will set the difficulty of the game by specifying the length of the word to guess as well as the number of incorrect guesses that will lose the game. The twist is that the program will cheat. Rather than actually picking a word at the beginning of the game, the program may avoid picking a word, so long as when Player 2 loses, the program can display a word that matches all the information given to Player 2. The correctly guessed letters must appear in their correct positions, and none of the incorrectly guessed letters can appear in the word at all. When the game ends, Player 1 (the program) will tell Player 2 the word that was chosen. Therefore, Player 2 can never prove that the game is cheating; it's just that the likelihood of Player 2 winning is small.

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    Look at one of these, and weight by string length. Sep 23, 2015 at 19:21
  • I don't quite understand which problem you're trying to solve. If you're implementing Hangman, you already need to have a list of words, so you can verify the answer. If you then just select a random word by using random.choice(word_list), the length of the picked words will automatically follow the same distribution as in the list of words to pick from. Lots of 5 letter words? Then there's a higher chance of a 5 letter word being picked.
    – Lukas Graf
    Sep 23, 2015 at 19:30
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    @LukasGraf, I have updated the question to show why your comment does not apply (although, of course, it's perfectly correct given the information I originally supplied). Thanks for the feedback.
    – Edward
    Sep 23, 2015 at 21:05
  • @Edward I see, that makes sense now (and is what I'd call a slightly evil version of hangman). Thanks for the update ;-)
    – Lukas Graf
    Sep 23, 2015 at 21:20

2 Answers 2

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If you have your words in a list words, random.choice(words) will uniformly randomly select a word from the list.

If you only have word lengths, I'd store the lengths and counts in a list:

len_counts = [
    (1, 24), # 24 1-length words
    (2, 39), # 39 2-length words
    ...
]

And use the algorithm in this answer to uniformly select a length: https://stackoverflow.com/a/4322940/71522

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  • Nice - I was not aware of bisect. Thanks!
    – Edward
    Sep 23, 2015 at 21:02
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# rel_dist holds the relative weight you want for each word length
# here, words of length 3 have weight 9, length 4 have weight 8, etc
# make sure you cover all word lengths
rel_dist = [0, 0, 0, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3]
random.choice(sum([[word]*rel_dist[len(word)]) for word in words], []))

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