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I'm need a pseudo-random generator which takes a number as input and returns another number witch is reproducible and seems to be random.

  • Each input number should match to exactly one output number and vice versa
  • same input numbers always result in same output numbers
  • sequential input numbers that are close together (eg. 1 and 2) should produce completely different output numbers (eg. 1 => 9783526, 2 => 283)

It must not be perfect, it's just to create random but reproducible test data.

I use C#.


I wrote this funny piece of code some time ago which produced something random.

  public static long Scramble(long number, long max) 
  {
    // some random values 
    long[] scramblers = { 3, 5, 7, 31, 343, 2348, 89897 };
    number += (max / 7) + 6;
    number %= max;
    // shuffle according to divisibility
    foreach (long scrambler in scramblers) 
    {
      if (scrambler >= max / 3) break;
      number = ((number * scrambler) % max) 
        + ((number * scrambler) / max);
    }

    return number % max;
  }

I would like to have something better, more reliable, working with any size of number (no max argument).

Could this probably be solved using a CRC algorithm? Or some bit shuffling stuff.

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3  
You want a hash function. – phoku Oct 8 at 13:55
Dup of stackoverflow.com/questions/239063 – sbi Oct 8 at 13:58
@sbi: not sure this is an exact duplicate, given the requirement for exclusive correspondence between input and output. See tanascius comment on my answer below. – MusiGenesis Oct 8 at 14:02
From the accepted answer of the question I linked to: "In PRNG functions, the output of the function is dependent on a 'seed' value, such that the same output will be provided from successive calls given the same seed value." So it is already explained there. That's why it is a duplicate. – sbi Oct 8 at 14:18
@phoku: might be a silly question, but... HOW do I hash the seed? – Stefan Steinegger Oct 8 at 14:31
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4 Answers

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You (maybe) can do this easily in C# using the Random class:

public int GetPseudoRandomNumber(int input)
{
    Random random = new Random(input);
    return random.Next();
}

Since you're explicitly seeding Random with the input, you will get the same output every time given the same input value.

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2  
But his first requirement is "Each input number should match to exactly one output number and vice versa" - the vice versa will not work with your solution. – tanascius Oct 8 at 13:57
@tanascius: actually, I'm not sure this wouldn't match this requirement, but I don't know how Random works under the hood, so you might be right. – MusiGenesis Oct 8 at 13:59
1  
Well, I tested for inputs 1 to 10mio ... you never get the same output twice ... so it might work indeed. But it is still dependant on the implementation and could change in the future. – tanascius Oct 8 at 14:08
I have to admit that the "match - and vice versa" part is not a too strong requirement, since I don't need all the numbers of the input value. It just should not produce the same numbers over and over again while never producing others. – Stefan Steinegger Oct 8 at 14:10
@tanascius: quick test, thanks. I suspect MS is not likely to change the implementation any time soon. After all, "randomness is too important to be left to chance". :) – MusiGenesis Oct 8 at 14:11
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I remove the microsoft code from this answer, the GNU code file is a lot longer but basically it contains this from http://cs.uccs.edu/~cs591/bufferOverflow/glibc-2.2.4/stdlib/random%5Fr.c :

int32_t val = state[0];
val = ((state[0] * 1103515245) + 12345) & 0x7fffffff;
state[0] = val;
*result = val;

for your purpose, the seed is state[0] so it would look more like

int getRand(int val)
{
    return ((val * 1103515245) + 12345) & 0x7fffffff;
}
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Um, that copyright notice somewhat pokes into my eye. Do you think you are allowed to simply paste that code here? – sbi Oct 8 at 14:15
well, I'm not a lawyer but it's just a snippet from the file, also it says copyright 1985 - 2001 (it's 2009 now). It's also available online in other places and i did leave the copyright text in the file. If someone has a problem with this i can remove the answer and replace it with the GNU one. – John Boker Oct 8 at 15:11
This is Steve Ballmer - your ass is mine, boy! – MusiGenesis Oct 8 at 16:18
@MusiGenesis as steve balmer i can just send you all my issues with windows and you'll get them fixed ? – John Boker Oct 8 at 19:19
@John: yes, after I crush you like a grape! Bwahahahaha! – MusiGenesis Oct 8 at 19:56
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The first two rules suggest a fixed or input-seeded permutation of the input, but the third rule requires a further transform.

Is there any further restriction on what the outputs should be, to guide that transform? - e.g. is there an input set of output values to choose from?

If the only guide is "no max", I'd use the following...

  1. Apply a hash algorithm to the whole input to get the first output item. A CRC might work, but for more "random" results, use a crypto hash algorithm such as MD5.

  2. Use a next permutation algorithm (plenty of links on Google) on the input.

  3. Repeat the hash-then-next-permutation until all required outputs are found.

The next permutation may be overkill though, you could probably just increment the first input (and maybe, on overflow, increment the second and so on) before redoing the hash.

For crypto-style hashing, you'll need a key - just derive something from the input before you start.

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This looks like a dupe of this SO post - Pseudo Random Generator with same output.

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