vote up 2 vote down star
1

I've created a site for an artist friend of mine, and she wants the layout to stay the same, but she also wants new paintings she'd produced to be mixed into the current layout. So I have 12 thumbnails (thumb1 - thumb12) on the main gallery page and 18 images (img1 - img18) to place.

The approach I thought of was to create an array of all the images, randomize it, then simply scrape off the first 12 and load them into the thumb slots. Another approach would be to select 12 images randomly from the array. In the first case, I can't find a way to randomize the elements of an array. In the latter case, I can't wrap my brain around how to keep images from loading more than once, other than using a second array, which seems very inefficient and scary.

I'm doing all of this in Javascript, by the by.

flag

3 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

I wrote this a while ago and it so happens to fit what you're looking for. I believe it's the Fisher-Yates shuffle that ojblass refers to:

Array.prototype.shuffle = function() {
   var i = this.length;
   while (--i) {
      var j = Math.floor(Math.random() * (i + 1))
      var temp = this[i];
      this[i] = this[j];
      this[j] = temp;
   }

   return this; // for convenience, in case we want a reference to the array
};

Note that modifying Array.prototype may be considered bad form. You might want to implement this as a standalone method that takes the array as an argument. Anyway, to finish it off:

var randomSubset = originalArray.shuffle().slice(0,13);

Or, if you don't want to actually modify the original:

var randomSubset = originalArray.slice(0).shuffle().slice(0,13);
link|flag
Note that the inner loop is the Fisher-Yates shuffle mentioned. The outer loop is doing multiple shuffles. (Not that there's anything wrong with that.) – Bill the Lizard May 2 at 1:48
1  
Just a note your 'iters' loop. The Fisher-Yates shuffle is said to be unbiased which mean that every permutation is equally likely. Mixing up the array multiple times in no way "means a better mix." – Robert C. Cartaino May 2 at 1:53
Even if the random number has a highly uneven distribution? I may as well just edit that part out anyway, as it obfuscates the answer to the question, as Bill points out. – Jeremy Huiskamp May 2 at 1:59
Thanks so much! – b. e. hollenbeck May 4 at 1:41
vote up 5 vote down

You should implement the Fisher-Yates shuffle (otherwise known as the Knuth shuffle).

Look at the great answer provided here.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Your first approach would work. Just shuffle the 18 elements and take the first 12.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.