I was creating a simple program that simulates a coin toss for my class. (Actually, class is over this term and i’m just working through the rest of the projects that weren’t required). It involves the creating and calling a function that generates a random number between 1 and 2. Originally, I tried to seed the random number generator within the function that would be using it (coinToss); however, it did not produce a random number. Each time the program was run it was the same number as though I had only used
rand()
instead of
unsigned seed = time(0);
srand(seed);
rand();
Yet, when i moved the above within
int main()
it worked fine.
My question is 1)why did it not work when setup within the function that called it and (2) how does rand()
have access to what was done by srand() if they do not both occur in the same function?
Obviously, i’m a beginner so please forgive me if i didn’t formulate the question correctly. Also, my book has only briefly touched on rand() and srand() so that’s all i really know.
thanks for any help!
Pertinent code:
First attempt that didn’t work:
int main()
{
//...........
coinToss();
//...........
}
int coinToss()
{
unsigned seed = time(0);
srand(seed);
return 1 + rand() % 2;
}
Second attempt which did work:
int main()
{
unsigned seed = time(0);
srand(seed);
coinToss();
}
int coinToss()
{
return 1 + rand() % 2;
}
You probably only want to seed the random number generator once.
rand()returns the next pseudo-random number from it’s internal generator. Every time you callrand()you will get the next number from the internal generator.srand()however sets the initial conditions of the random number generator. You can think of it as setting the ‘starting-out point’ for the internal random number generator (in reality it’s a lot more complicated than that, but it’s a useful cognitive model to follow).So, you should be calling
srand(time(0))exactly once in your application – somewhere near the beginning. After that, you can callrand()as many times as you want!However
To answer your actual question – the first version doesn’t work because
time()returns the number of seconds since the epoch. So If you callcoinToss()several times in a second (say, if you wanted to simulate 100 coin tosses), then you’d be constantly seeding the random number generator with the same number, thereby resetting it’s internal state (and thus the next number you get) every time.Anyway – using
time()as a seed tosrand()is somewhat crappy for this very reason –time()doesn’t chage very often, and worse, it’s predictable. If you know the current time, you can work out whatrand()will return. The internet has many, many examples of bettersrand()seeds.