I can use:
boost::mt19937 gen(43);
this works just fine, but what if I want more than 32-bits of seed before using the random number generator? Is there an easy way to put 64-bits or 128-bits of seed into the Mersenne Twister?
I found a few examples of loading multiple values before generating results, but none of the code works.
There are a couple of problems with this code:
std::vector<unsigned int> seedv(1000, 11);
std::vector<unsigned int>::iterator i=seedv.begin();
boost::mt19937 gen2(i, seedv.end());
First, calling gen2() always returns the same value. I don't know how I screwed that up.
Second, I don't want 1,000 seeds, but when I lower it to 600 it "throws an instance of std::invalid_argument with note enough elements in call to seed"
Can this method be shortened to a handful of seeds?
Here is another code example that looks easy:
std::string seedv("thisistheseed");
std::seed_seq q(seedv.begin(),seedv.end());
boost::mt19937 gen2(q);
but it won't compile. I finally figured out that std::seed_seq is only available in c++11. I am stuck with gcc 4.7 until the libraries I depend on are stable.
I suppose I can just stick with a 32-bit seed, but I wanted a little bit more.
I did read this article: Boost Mersenne Twister: how to seed with more than one value?
I like the idea of initializing the whole vector from:
mersenne_twister(seed1) ^ mersenne_twister(seed2)
but I don't see a way to do that without modifying Mersenne_Twister.hpp
Any suggestions?
UPDATE: one more way not to do it!
unsigned long seedv[4];
seedv[0]=1;
seedv[1]=2;
seedv[2]=3;
seedv[3]=4;
boost::mt19937 gen2(seedv,4);
With the right casting, this should work, but every cast I have tried still won't get past the compiler. I can cast anything in C, but C++ still stumps me at times...