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I need a 6 character alphanumeric ID for use in my rails app, which will be presented to users of the system and must be unique among all the object instances in my system. I don't expect more than a few thousand object instances, so 6 characters is far more than I really need.

At this point I'm using the UUIDTools gem in my Rails app to generate a uuid. Which of the UUIDTools generation methods should I use, and which end of the resulting uuid should I take the 6 characters from, to guarantee uniqueness?

for example, if I generate ef1cf087-95c9-4868-bd95-cea950a52b58, would I want to use ef1cf0 from the front of it, or a52b58 from the back end?

... as a side note / question: am i going about this wrong? is there a better way?

2 Answers 2

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No way. UUID is considered unique because it is very long and it is practically impossible to generate same UUIDs. If you trim it to 6 chars then you drammatically increase possiblility of duplicate. You have to use either incrementing id or full UUID.

Only deterministic generation (id(x + 1) = id(x) + 1) can guarantee uniqueness. UUID doesn't guarantee it and 6 chars guarantee it even less.

Other option is to create ID generation service, it will have single method getNewId and will keep knowledge that will be enought to provide unique ids. (Simplest case - counter)

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  • incrementing ID and full UUID are not options. provide me an option to generate a 6 digit alphanumeric id that is unique. Mar 16, 2011 at 16:33
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    @Derick Bailey there are none. you can achieve uniqueness either statistically (UUID case) or by sharing of knowledge of previously generated ids (increment). Random 6 chars fall in neither category.
    – Andrey
    Mar 16, 2011 at 16:37
  • d'oh! sorry... accidental click of the downvote, and it won't let me undo it... says vote is locked unless answer is edited. Mar 16, 2011 at 16:43
  • @Derick Bailey I added some info, so that you can remove downvote and I hope that it is also useful
    – Andrey
    Mar 16, 2011 at 16:45
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    You could always base-36 encode (0-9a-z) an incremented integer id. That will give you an alpha-numeric identifier, but guaranteed uniqueness. Mar 16, 2011 at 16:51
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When you say that incrementing the ID isn't an option, is that because you don't want users to see the scheme you're using, or because the generation must be stateless (i.e., you can't keep track of all IDs you've generated)?

If it's the former, then you can generate an ID, check to see if you've already used it, and if so, generate another new ID. (Seems pretty obvious so sorry if I'm on the wrong track.) You could do something like this:

while id = rand(2**256).to_s(36)[0..5] 
   break unless Ids.exists?(id)
end

where Ids.exists?(id) is the does-this-already-exist method.

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  • oh boy will this algorithm have interesting O-notation figures! Apr 1, 2011 at 10:10
  • Right, it's the cost of generating the key (constant) plus the cost of checking for a collision (if the table's in memory, depends on the hash function). Given that Derick said he's only generating a few thousand keys, collisions are very unlikely. Apr 1, 2011 at 13:15
  • This should have been the accepted answer even if it's distasteful. Jan 29, 2013 at 7:45

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