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How to randomize order of approximately 20 elements with lowest complexity? (generating random permutations)

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What do you mean by cca? – Stefan Kendall Nov 7 at 1:48
Canonical correlation analysis? – Murali Nov 7 at 1:49
What do you mean by ca.? :P – Stefan Kendall Nov 7 at 1:51
cca equals approximatly – Ante Nov 7 at 1:57
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Isn't this a duplicate of a list shuffle question? stackoverflow.com/questions/375351/… – Mathias Nov 7 at 2:28
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4 Answers

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Knuth's shuffle algorithm is a good choice.

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Disappointing that anyone has said anything else, frankly. – Steve 'onebyone' Jessop Nov 7 at 3:31
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Probably someone already implemented the shuffling for you. For example, in Python you can use random.shuffle, in C++ random_shuffle, and in PHP shuffle.

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hmm.. php maybe? – Ante Nov 7 at 3:07
Surprisingly, in PHP it is called shuffle :) I'll update my answer. – Roberto Bonvallet Nov 7 at 14:08
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A simple way to randomise the order is to make a new list of the correct size (20 in your case), iterate over the first list, and add each element in a random position to the second list. If the random position is already filled, put it in the next free position.

I think this pseudocode is correct:

list newList
foreach (element in firstList)
    int position = Random.Int(0, firstList.Length - 1)
    while (newList[position] != null)
    	position = (position + 1) % firstList.Length
    newList[position] = element

EDIT: so it turns out that this answer isn't actually that good. It is neither particularly fast, nor particularly random. Thankyou for your comments. For a good answer, please scroll back to the top of the page :-)

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In the worst case this algorithm is O(n^2) (ie, if your random number generator says "1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, ...", I let you calculate the rest), not very optimized. – Bruno Reis Nov 7 at 2:23
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Putting items in the next free position makes it less random. The items will keep their original order more than in a truly random shuffle. To fix that you would have to pick a new random position when a position is taken, which of course makes it a lot slower. – Guffa Nov 7 at 3:00
That's a good point Guffa. I'd never realised that. Thanks. At least I've learnt something here :-) – David Johnstone Nov 7 at 3:19
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Some months ago I blogged about obtaining a random permutation of a list of integers. You could use that as a permutation of indexes of the set containing your elements, and then you have what you want.

In the first post I explore some possibilities, and finally I obtain "a function to randomly permutate a generic list with O(n) complexity", properly encapsulated to work on immutable data (ie, it is side-effect free).

In the second post, I make it uniformely distributed.

The code is in F#, I hope you don't mind!

Good luck.

EDIT: I don't have a formal proof, but intuition tells me that the complexity of such an algorithm cannot be lower than O(n). I'd really appreciate seeing it done faster!

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it's 3 a.m. here, i'm afraid i can't understand it now.. =) – Ante Nov 7 at 1:53
Yeah, I know how you feel... same timezone here! – Bruno Reis Nov 7 at 2:07
recursion in second article is simple.. i think i could use it.. – Ante Nov 7 at 2:09
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All permutations must be possible, and re-arranging an array into a derangement (that is, a permutation p for which p(k) != k for all k) requires that every element be visited. Hence O(n) worst case. Or is that still not formal enough? – Steve 'onebyone' Jessop Nov 7 at 3:25
Also O(n) average case by the same proof, come to think of it, since IIRC the proportion of permutations of (1...n) which are derangements approaches 1/e as n approaches infinity. – Steve 'onebyone' Jessop Nov 7 at 3:27

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