Consider the .NET Random stream:

var r = new Random(); 
while (true) 
{ 
    r.Next(); 
}

How long does it take to repeat?

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Please elaborate on 'cycle'? Do you mean it's inner workings? – Tony The Lion Jan 12 '10 at 16:21
i think it depends on the seed. – John Boker Jan 12 '10 at 16:22
I think you mean .NET, not just C# – Jay Bazuzi Jan 12 '10 at 16:31
I couldn't find a Random() function. I think you mean the results of 'var r = new Random(); while (true) { r.Next(); }'. Is that correct? – Jay Bazuzi Jan 12 '10 at 16:32
I think you're asking "how long until the stream of random numbers starts over?". Is that correct? – Jay Bazuzi Jan 12 '10 at 16:34
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up vote 10 down vote accepted

According to the documentation:

Pseudo-random numbers are chosen with equal probability from a finite set of numbers. The chosen numbers are not completely random because a definite mathematical algorithm is used to select them, but they are sufficiently random for practical purposes. The current implementation of the Random class is based on Donald E. Knuth's subtractive random number generator algorithm. For more information, see D. E. Knuth. "The Art of Computer Programming, volume 2: Seminumerical Algorithms". Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, second edition, 1981.

The subtractive generator (Knuth, Vol 2) Xf,n = (Xf,n-k - Xf,n-j) mod 1. See Knuth for a table of possible values of k and j. We choose k = 63, j = 31. This generator is interesting because:

  • It has a long period. The period of the least significant bit in this sequence is 2k-1. The actual period is much longer than this.
  • With some mild restrictions, the floating point arithmetic involved is exact!

The second property holds when X is of the form l 247 (0 � l < 247) Single-precision arithmetic is exact on the Crays (48-bit mantissa) and as is double-precision arithmetic on IEEE-compliant machines.

This allows the basic random number sequence to be generated by the Fortran code

  x(n) = x(n-k) - x(n-j)
  if (x(n) < 0.0) x(n) = 1.0 + x(n)

In practice random numbers are generated in batches as needed and stored in an array which acts as a circular buffer.

The algorithm mentioned has a period that depends on the seed value - you can find more details here.

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