115

Is the following a pure function?

function test(min,max) {
   return  Math.random() * (max - min) + min;
}

My understanding is that a pure function follows these conditions:

  1. It returns a value computed from the parameters
  2. It doesn't do any work other than calculating the return value

If this definition is correct, is my function a pure function? Or is my understanding of what defines a pure function incorrect?

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  • 68
    "It doesn't do any work other than calculating the return value" But it calls Math.random() which changes the state of the RNG. Oct 31, 2017 at 16:02
  • 1
    The second point is more like "it does not changes external (to the function) state"; and the first should be complemented somewhat like "it returns the SAME value computed from the SAME parameters", as people have writen below
    – MVCDS
    Oct 31, 2017 at 20:54
  • Is there a notion of a semipure function, allowing for randomness? E.g. test(a,b) always returns the same object Random(a,b) (which can represent different concrete numbers)? If you keep Random symbolic it is pure in the classical sense, if you evaluate it early and put in numbers, maybe as a kind of optimization, the function still retains some "pureness".
    – jdm
    Nov 1, 2017 at 8:29
  • 1
    "Anyone who considers arithmetical methods of producing random digits is, of course, in a state of sin." - John von Neumann
    – Steve Kuo
    Nov 2, 2017 at 20:51
  • 1
    @jdm if you follow the thread of "semi-pure", where you consider functions pure modulo some well-defined side-effects, you might end up inventing monads. Welcome to the dark side. >:)
    – luqui
    Nov 3, 2017 at 2:15

9 Answers 9

194

No, it's not. Given the same input, this function will return different values. And then you can't build a 'table' that maps the input and the outputs.

From the Wikipedia article for Pure function:

The function always evaluates the same result value given the same argument value(s). The function result value cannot depend on any hidden information or state that may change while program execution proceeds or between different executions of the program, nor can it depend on any external input from I/O devices

Also, another thing is that a pure function can be replaced with a table which represents the mapping from the input and output, as explained in this thread.

If you want to rewrite this function and change it to a pure function, you should pass the random value as an argument too

function test(random, min, max) {
   return random * (max - min) + min;
}

and then call it this way (example, with 2 and 5 as min and max):

test( Math.random(), 2, 5)
15
  • 2
    What if you were to re-seed the random generator each time inside the function before calling Math.random? Oct 31, 2017 at 20:05
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    @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Even then, it would still have side-effects (changing future Math.random output); for it to be pure, you'd have to somehow save the current RNG state, reseed it, call Math.random, and restore it to the previous state. Oct 31, 2017 at 20:09
  • 3
    @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ All computed RNG is based around faking randomness. Something has to be running underneath that causes it to appear random and you can't account for that, making it impure. Also, and probably more important to your question, you can't seed Math.random
    – zfrisch
    Oct 31, 2017 at 20:12
  • 15
    @LegionMammal978 …and do so atomically.
    – wchargin
    Oct 31, 2017 at 20:25
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    @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ There are ways to have RNGs that do operate with pure functions, but it involves passing the RNG state to the function and having the function return the replacement RNG state, which is how Haskell (a functional programming language that enforces functional purity) achieves it.
    – Pharap
    Nov 2, 2017 at 11:39
53

The simple answer to your question is that Math.random() violates rule #2.

Many other answers here have pointed out that the presence of Math.random() means that this function is not pure. But I think it's worth saying why Math.random() taints functions that use it.

Like all pseudorandom number generators, Math.random() starts with a "seed" value. It then uses that value as the starting point for a chain of low-level bit manipulations or other operations that result in an unpredictable (but not really random) output.

In JavaScript, the process involved is implementation-dependent, and unlike many other languages, JavaScript provides no way to select the seed:

The implementation selects the initial seed to the random number generation algorithm; it cannot be chosen or reset by the user.

That's why this function isn't pure: JavaScript is essentially using an implicit function parameter that you have no control over. It's reading that parameter from data calculated and stored elsewhere, and therefore violates rule #2 in your definition.

If you wanted to make this a pure function, you could use one of the alternative random number generators described here. Call that generator seedable_random. It takes one parameter (the seed) and returns a "random" number. Of course, this number isn't really random at all; it is uniquely determined by the seed. That's why this is a pure function. The output of seedable_random is only "random" in the sense that predicting the output based on the input is difficult.

The pure version of this function would need to take three parameters:

function test(min, max, seed) {
   return  seedable_random(seed) * (max - min) + min;
}

For any given triple of (min, max, seed) parameters, this will always return the same result.

Note that if you wanted the output of seedable_random to be truly random, you'd need to find a way to randomize the seed! And whatever strategy you used would inevitably be non-pure, because it would require you to gather information from a source outside your function. As mtraceur and jpmc26 remind me, this includes all physical approaches: hardware random number generators, webcams with lens caps, atmospheric noise collectors -- even lava lamps. All of these involve using data calculated and stored outside the function.

10
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    Math.random() not only reads its "seed" but also modifies it, so that the next call will return something different. Depending on, and modifying, static state is definitely bad for a pure function. Oct 31, 2017 at 14:45
  • 2
    @NateEldredge, quite so! Though simply reading an implementation-dependent value is enough to break purity. For example, ever notice how Python 3 hashes aren't stable between processes?
    – senderle
    Oct 31, 2017 at 15:12
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    How would this answer change if Math.random did not use a PRNG but was instead implemented using a hardware RNG? The hardware RNG doesn't really have state in the normal sense, but it does produce random values (and thus function output is still different regardless of input), right?
    – mtraceur
    Nov 1, 2017 at 18:17
  • @mtraceur, that's correct. But I don't think the answer would change much. In fact, this is why I don't spend time talking about "state" in my answer. Reading from a hardware RNG also means reading from "data calculated and stored elsewhere." It's just that the data is calculated and stored in the physical medium of the computer itself as it interacts with its environment.
    – senderle
    Nov 1, 2017 at 18:28
  • 1
    This same logic applies even to more sophisticated randomization schemes, even ones like Random.org's atmospheric noise. +1
    – jpmc26
    Nov 1, 2017 at 21:15
40

A pure function is a function where the return value is only determined by its input values, without observable side effects

By using Math.random, you are determining its value by something other than input values. It's not a pure function.

source

0
25

No, it isn't a pure function because its output doesn't depend only on the input provided (Math.random() can output any value), while pure functions should always output the same value for same inputs.

If a function is pure, it's safe to optimize away multiple calls with the same inputs and just reuse the result of an earlier call.

P.S for me at least and for many others, redux made the term pure function popular. Straight from the redux docs:

Things you should never do inside a reducer:

  • Mutate its arguments;

  • Perform side effects like API calls and routing transitions;

  • Call non-pure functions, e.g. Date.now() or Math.random().

1
  • 3
    Although others have provided great answers, but i couldn't resist myself when redux doc's came to my mind and Math.random() specifically mentioned in them :) Oct 31, 2017 at 12:36
21

From mathematical point of view, your signature is not

test: <number, number> -> <number>

but

test: <environment, number, number> -> <environment, number>

where the environment is capable of providing results of Math.random(). And actually generating the random value mutates the environment as a side effect, so you also return a new environment, which is not equal to the first one!

In other words, if you need any kind of input that does not come from initial arguments (the <number, number> part), then you need to be provided with execution environment (that in this example provides state for Math). The same applies to other things mentioned by other answers, like I/O or such.


As an analogy, you can also notice this is how object-oriented programming can be represented - if we say, e.g.

SomeClass something
T result = something.foo(x, y)

then actually we are using

foo: <something: SomeClass, x: Object, y: Object> -> <SomeClass, T>

with the object that has its method invoked being part of the environment. And why the SomeClass part of result? Because something's state could have changed as well!

2
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    Worse yet, the environment is also mutated, so test: <environment, number, number> -> <environment, number> it should be
    – Bergi
    Oct 31, 2017 at 18:00
  • 1
    I'm not sure the OO example is very similar. a.F(b, c) can be seen as syntactic sugar for F(a, b, c) with a special rule to despatch to overloaded definitions of F based on the type of a (this is actually how Python represents it). But a is still explicit in both notations, whereas the environment in a non-pure function is never mentioned in the source code.
    – IMSoP
    Nov 2, 2017 at 16:05
11

Pure functions always return the same value for same input. Pure functions are predictable and are referential transparent which means that we can replace the function call with the output returned and it will not change the working of the program.

https://github.com/MostlyAdequate/mostly-adequate-guide/blob/master/ch3.md

0
10

In addition to the other answers that correctly point out how this function is non-deterministic, it also has a side-effect: it will cause future calls to math.random() to return a different answer. And a random-number generator that doesn’t have that property will generally perform some kind of I/O, such as to read from a random device provided by the OS. Either is verboten for a pure function.

7

No, it isn't. You can't figure out the result at all, so this piece of code can't be tested. To make that code testable, you need to extract the component that generates the random number:

function test(min, max, generator) {
  return  generator() * (max - min) + min;
}

Now, you can mock the generator and test your code properly:

const result = test(1, 2, () => 3);
result == 4 //always true

And in your "production" code:

const result = test(1, 2, Math.random);
1
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    ▲ for your thought for testability. With a little care you can also produce repeatable tests while accepting a util.Random, which you can seed at the start of a test run to repeat old behaviour or for a new (but repeatable) run. If multi-threading, you may be able to do this in the main thread and use that Random to seed repeatable thread-local Randoms. However, as I understand it, test(int,int,Random) is not considered pure as it alters the state of the Random.
    – PJTraill
    Nov 1, 2017 at 21:10
2

Would you be fine with the following:

return ("" + test(0,1)) + test(0,1);

be equivalent to

var temp = test(0, 1);
return ("" + temp) + temp;

?

You see, the definition of pure is a function whose output does not change with anything other than its inputs. If we say that JavaScript had a way to tag a function pure and take advantage of this, the optimizer would be allowed to rewrite the first expression as the second.

I have practical experience with this. SQL server allowed getdate() and newid() in "pure" functions and the optimizer would dedupe calls at will. Sometimes this would do something dumb.

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