random number including 1 - i.e. [0,1]
dickinsm at gmail.com
dickinsm at gmail.com
Wed Jun 10 09:13:53 EDT 2009
Esmail <ebonak at hotmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> random.random() will generate a random value in the range [0, 1).
>
> Is there an easy way to generate random values in the range [0, 1]?
> I.e., including 1?
>
> [...]
Here are three recipes, each more pedantic than the last. They all
assume that Python floats are IEEE 754 binary64 format (which they
almost certainly are on your machine), and that randrange generates
all values with equal likelihood (which it almost certainly doesn't,
but the assumption should be good enough for government work).
import random
def random1():
"""Random float in [0, 1]. Generates all floats of the form n/2**53,
0 <= n <= 2**53, with equal probability.
"""
return random.randrange(2**53+1)/2.**53
def random2():
"""Random float in [0, 1]. Generates all floats of the forn n/2**53,
0 <= n <= 2**53, with values in (0.0, 1.0) equally likely, and the
endpoints 0.0 and 1.0 occuring with half the probability of any
other value.
This is equivalent to generating a random real number uniformly on
the closed interval [0, 1] and then rounding that real number to the
nearest float of the form n/2**53.
"""
return (random.randrange(2**54)+1)//2/2.**53
def random3():
"""Random float in [0, 1]. Generates *all* floats in the interval
[0.0, 1.0] (including 0.0 and 1.0, but excluding -0.0). Each
float is generated with a probability corresponding to the size of
the subinterval of [0, 1] that rounds to the given float under
round-to-nearest.
This is equivalent to generating a random real number uniformly on
the closed interval [0, 1] and then rounding that real number to
the nearest representable floating-point number.
"""
m = (random.randrange(2**53)+1)//2
e = 1022
while random.randrange(2) and e:
e -= 1
return (m+2**52) * 2.**(e-1075) if e else m*2.**-1074
--
Mark Dickinson
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