4

p.s. I have referred to this as Random, but this is a Seed Based Random Shuffle, where the Seed will be generated by a PRNG, but with the same Seed, the same "random" distribution will be observed.

I am currently trying to find a method to assist in doing 2 things:

1) Generate Non-Repeating Sequence

This will take 2 arguments: Seed; and N. It will generate a sequence, of size N, populated with numbers between 1 and N, with no repetitions.

I have found a few good methods to do this, but most of them get stumped by feasibility with the second thing.

2) Extract an entry from the Sequence

This will take 3 arguments: Seed; N; and I. This is for determining what value would appear at position I in a Sequence that would be generated with Seed and N. However, in order to work with what I have in mind, it absolutely cannot use a generated sequence, and pick out an element.

I initially worked with pre-calculating the sequence, then querying it, but this only really works in test cases, as the number of Seeds, and the value of N that will be used would create a database into the Petabytes.

From what I can tell, having a method that implements requirement 1 by using requirement 2 would be the most ideal method.

i.e. a sequence is generated by:

function Generate_Sequence(int S, int N) {
    int[] sequence = new int[N];
    for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) {
        sequence[i] = Extract_From_Sequence(S, N, i);
    }
    return sequence;
}

For Example

GS = Generate Sequence
ES = Extract from Sequence

for:
 S = 1
 N = 5
 I = 4

GS(S, N) = { 4, 2, 5, 1, 3 }
ES(S, N, I) = 1

let S = 2

GS(S, N) = { 3, 5, 2, 4, 1 }
ES(S, N, I) = 4
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  • 1
    1.) [1, 2, 3 ... N].random_sort()
    – Aprillion
    Feb 7, 2016 at 11:08
  • Could you elaborate more on the second case? I don't quite get what you want to achieve.
    – Lingxi
    Feb 7, 2016 at 11:11
  • @Lingxi sounds like a lazy sequence (generator) for cases when N wouldn't fit into memory
    – Aprillion
    Feb 7, 2016 at 11:13
  • If the sequence is random, does it matter what value I assumes?
    – Lingxi
    Feb 7, 2016 at 11:14
  • 1
    preshing.com/20121224/… looks promising
    – Aprillion
    Feb 7, 2016 at 11:57

1 Answer 1

1

One way to do this is to make a permutation over the bit positions of the number. Assume that N is a power of two (I will discuss the general case later!). Use the seed S to generate a permutation \sigma over the set of {1,2,...,log(n)}. Then permute the bits of I according to the \sigma to obtain I'. In other words, the bit of I' at the position \sigma(x) is obtained from the bit of I at the position x. One problem with this method is its linearity (It is closed under the XOR operation). To overcome this, you can find a number p with gcd(p,N)=1 (this can be done easily even for very large Ns) and generate a random number (q < N) using the seed S. The output of the Extract_From_Sequence(S, N, I) would be (p*I'+q mod N).

Now the case where N is not a complete power of two. The problem arises when the I' falls outside the range of [1,N]. In that case, we return the most significant bits of I to their initial position until the resulting value falls into the desired range. This is done by changing the \sigma(log(n)) bit of I' with the log(n) bit, and so on ....

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