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Edit: Removed mentioning of hashCode()

I'm working on a seed-based terrain generator so that if a user enters a specific String into the text field, it will produce the same world every time. The way I was planning to do this was to use an algorithm that produces a 19-digit-long long (pun intended). The program will then utilize value of certain indices, or a combination of values of certain indicies, and other computations to set certain aspects of the world, like biomes, amplitude, and variance. In essence, whenever the same seed is inputted, the same internal 19-digit long will be produced by the algorithm, and by consequence, the same world.

How can I create a custom hashing method that produces a 19-digit long for every input value? Before, I was using this:

private void generate() {

  long[] seedBuilder = new long[5];  // So I can print certain parts of the process for debugging purposes

  String clientSeed = seedField.getText();  // The input aka seed
  if (clientSeed.equals("")) clientSeed = String.valueOf(System.currentTimeMillis()); // use time if none is given


  // Basic hash of seed                     
  seedBuilder[0] = (long)clientSeed.hashCode();                  

  // primary-char hash * concluding-char hash (for reducing collisions)
  long comboID = clientSeed.substring(0,1).hashCode() * clientSeed.substring(clientSeed.length()-1).hashCode();                         

  // Basic hash * comboID 
  seedBuilder[1] = seedBuilder[0] * comboID; 

  // Absolute value             
  seedBuilder[2] = Math.abs(seedBuilder[1]);                     

  // Raised to the 1.27
  seedBuilder[3] = (long)(Math.pow(seedBuilder[2], 1.27));

  // Multiplied by 10.1 until digits = 19
  seedBuilder[4] = (long)(Math.pow(9.9,(19-(seedBuilder[3]+"").length())) * seedBuilder[3]);

  long generator = seedBuilder[4]

}

Basically, I got this through a lot of experimentation. The power of 1.27 was chosen arbitrarily and the 9.9 was just because anything over 10.1 could produce Long.MAX_VALUE, but I still wanted to get 19 digits. The problem is that some brute-force random-string testing showed that the distribution is really uneven; 60% of the results (aka seedBuilder[4]) began with 3 or 4, and 6 or 7 appear as the first index value like 5% of the time, I believe I recall correctly. Whatever aspects of the world that would be controlled by the first index would be the same a lot of the time.

I want to do this in a less arbitrary, and more professional and safe way to produce a 19-digit long I can use for generation. Thanks. Please ask me to clarify something if it is unclear.

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    Err, hashCode() produces an int, not a long.
    – user207421
    Jul 24, 2016 at 1:58
  • That's correct, I fixed it now. Jul 24, 2016 at 3:08

1 Answer 1

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First of all, hashCode() returns int, not long, so overriding hashCode() is out.

If you want to generate a 19-digit (i.e. 64-bit) numeric value from a String, probably the simplest way is to use java.security.MessageDigest to "hash" the string to MD5, SHA1 or SHA256, extract 64 bits and convert to long using, one of the techniques described in this StackOverflow answer.

Be aware that without adjustment this returns a value between -263 and +263-1 so you'll likely want to ensure the sign bit is off. Then also note that some values may not have exactly 19 decimal digits, as the result space then includes all numbers between 0 and +263-1. Of that range 10% have one or more leading zeros, so if you always want 19 digits then you will need to preserve leading zeros or reduce the range to 0..1018-1 and add 1018.

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  • In the link you gave, I can see an answer that says how to convert bytes to a long, but I don't see how to extract bits out of MD5. And I don't understand what you meant by "reduce the range to 0..10^18-1 and add 10^18." Jul 24, 2016 at 3:17
  • Aha I believe this is the same answer as what you are saying? stackoverflow.com/a/14420953/5484609 Jul 24, 2016 at 3:40

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