show/hide this revision's text 2 clarified

In case anyone is wondering, I finally found a way to do this effectively. (I am sure this is what alltom was saying, I was just too dumb to understand.)

I declared a float and a seed in my .h file:

- (float)generate:(id)sender;
- (void)seed;

And in the implementation file, I defined the float as a random number, and I used srandom() as a random seed generator.

- (float)generate:(id)sender
{

//Generate a number between 1 and 100 inclusive
int generated;
generated = (random() % 100) + 1;

return(generated);
} 

- (void)seed {
srandom(time(NULL));
}

Then anywhere I wanted to retain a random number, I used

srandom(time(NULL));
generated1 = ((random() % 100) + 1)/100.0;

to initiate the number, and from there I was able to use generated1, generated2, hue, etc. as variables in any function I wanted (and I made sure to declare these variables as floats at the top of the file).

show/hide this revision's text 1

In case anyone is wondering, I finally found a way to do this effectively.

I declared a float and a seed in my .h file:

- (float)generate:(id)sender;
- (void)seed;

And in the implementation file, I defined the float as a random number, and I used srandom() as a random seed generator.

- (float)generate:(id)sender
{

//Generate a number between 1 and 100 inclusive
int generated;
generated = (random() % 100) + 1;

return(generated);
} 

- (void)seed {
srandom(time(NULL));
}

Then anywhere I wanted to retain a random number, I used

srandom(time(NULL));
generated1 = ((random() % 100) + 1)/100.0;

to initiate the number, and from there I was able to use generated1, generated2, hue, etc. as variables in any function I wanted.