I need a code to generate only random EVEN numbers 2-100
There is tutorials on the web that generate random numbers but they're odd and even.
Please understand i just need even numbers to generate.
1, generate numbers 1-50
2, multiply all the numbers by 2
all numbers multiplied by 2 are even
This will work:
NSInteger evenNumber = (arc4random_uniform(50) + 1) * 2;
arc4random_uniform(50) will give results in the range 0 - 49. Adding 1 gives a value in the range 1 - 50. Multiplying by two gives you even numbers in the range 2 - 100.
Related
Lets say for example we have the number 12345.
This sums to 15 when you add 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5, which sums to 6 when you add 1 + 5.
My question is, what would the time complexity be for a repetitive adding algorithm like this be? This process is happens until there is only a single digit left.
I know that for any given number, the # of digits is approximately ln(n). Im thinking that this means that the big o would look something like (ln(n))^k, for some k. However, I am not confident because each time you sum, the number of digits gets smaller (first summed 5 digits, then only 2).
How would I go about figuring this out?
I am a student and developing a quiz type of project. And I get the problem that I can't get random numbers for the questions.
The idea is to generate a number and than pick one of the texts (1,2,3) and according to the text to have the right number as answear. Also I need it in VB
If what you want to do is generate a random number you can use Random and the Next method:
The Next(Int32, Int32) overload returns random integers that range from minValue to maxValue – 1. However, if maxValue equals minValue, the method returns minValue.
Here is some sample code:
Dim r As Random = New Random
'The values 1, 2 and 3 are possible.
Console.WriteLine(r.Next(1, 4))
Console.WriteLine(r.Next(1, 4))
Console.WriteLine(r.Next(1, 4))
I have an output of ranges from 150-0. I want to map those to 0 to 1. Or perhaps 0 to (some value less than 1 such as 0.5) where 150 is 0 and 0 is 1 ( or some values less than..).
Is this considered interpolation? What is the formula to derive these values? But preferably, is there a built-in StdLib function I can call?
Divide your number by the (Max - min). This would make 150 be 1 and 0 will be 0, with everything else a number in between. Now, to make it the opposite just do 1 - result.
If you need to map 0-1 to any custom range, you need to multiply range with MAX-MIN and then add MIN to it to get the exact number in range.
Formula will be MIN + (MAX-MIN)*value
where value is range in between 0-1;
MIN is number mapped to 0;
MAX is number mapped to 1;
How do I make a biased random number generator (RNG) in VB.NET?
I know I could make it by fiddling with the output of the Randomize()/Rnd methods, but is there a built-in way of doing this?
I want the biased RNG to give me either a 2 or 4 (though using 1 or 2 as a substitute is also OK by me), with 2 occurring on average 90% of the time and 4 occurring on average 10% of the time.
Create a random number generator to return values from 1-10, if the value from the random number generator is between 1 and 9 send a 2 if the value is 10 send a 4.
You might want to look at this
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/vstudio/ctssatww(v=vs.100).aspx?cs-save-lang=1&cs-lang=vb#code-snippet-2
If you want to come out with a mask to generate your values
Here is what I think you can do.
Dim numbers() as integer = {2,2,2,2,4,2,2,2,2,2} ' set 10% for 4, 90% for 2
Dim r as new Random()
Return numbers(r.Next(0, 10))
I'm trying to emulate a function in SQL that a client has produced in Excel. In effect, they have a unique, 10-digit numeric value (VARCHAR) as the primary key in one of their enterprise database systems. Within another database, they require a unique, 5-digit alphanumeric identifier. They want that 5-digit alphanumeric value to be a representation of the 10-digit number. So what they did in excel was to split the 10-digit number into pairs, then convert each of those pairs into a hexadecimal value, then stitch them back together.
The EXCEL equation is:
=IF(VALUE(MID(A2,1,4))>0,DEC2HEX(VALUE(MID(A2,3,2)))&DEC2HEX(VALUE(MID(A2,5,2)))&DEC2HEX(VALUE(MID(A2,7,2)))&DEC2HEX(VALUE(MID(A2,9,2))),DEC2HEX(VALUE(MID(A2,5,2)))&DEC2HEX(VALUE(MID(A2,7,2)))&DEC2HEX((VALUE(MID(A2,9,2)))))
I need the SQL equivalent of this. Of course, should someone out there know a better way to accomplish their goal of "a 5-digit alphanumeric identifier" based off the 10-digit number, I'm all ears.
ADDED 8/2/2011
First of all, thank you to everyone for the replies. Nice to see folks willing to help and even enjoying it! Based on all the responses, I'm apt to tell my client they're intent is sound, only their method is off kilter. I'd also like to recommend a solution. So the challenge remains, just modified slightly:
CHALLENGE: Within SQL, take a 10 digit, unique NUMERIC string and represent it ALPHANUMERICALLY in as few characters as possible. The resulting string must also be unique.
Note that the first 3-4 characters in the 10-digit string are likely to be zeros, and that they could be stripped to shorten the resulting alphanumeric string. Not required, but perhaps helpful.
This problem is inherently impossible. You have a 10 digit numeric value that you want to convert to a 5 digit alphanumeric value. Since there are 10 numeric characters, this means that there are 10^10 = 10 000 000 000 unique values for your 10 digit number. Since there are 36 alphanumeric characters (26 letters + 10 numbers), there are 36^5 = 60 466 176 unique values for your 5 digit number. You cannot map a set of 10 billion elements into a set with around 60 million.
Now, lets take a closer look at what your client's code is doing:
So what they did in excel was to split the 10-digit number into pairs, then convert each of those pairs into a hexadecimal value, then stitch them back together.
This isn't 100% accurate. The excel code never uses the first 2 digits, but performs this operation on the remaining 8. There are two main problems with this algorithm which may not be intuitively obvious:
Two 10 digit numbers can map to the same 5 digit number. Consider the numbers 1000000117 and 1000001701. The last four digits of 1000000117 get mapped to 1 11, where the last four digits of 1000001701 get mapped to 11 1. This causes both to map to 00111.
The 5 digit number may not even end up being 5 digits! For example, 1000001616 gets mapped to 001010.
So, what is a possible solution? Well, if you don't care if that 5 digit number is unique or not, in MySQL you can use something like:
hex(<NUMERIC VALUE> % 0xFFFFF)
The log of 10^10 base 2 is 33.219280948874
> return math.log(10 ^ 10) / math.log(2)
33.219280948874
> = 2 ^ 33.21928
9999993422.9114
So, it takes 34 bits to represent this number. In hex this will take 34/4 = 8.5 characters, much more than 5.
> return math.log(10 ^ 10) / math.log(16)
8.3048202372184
The Excel macro is ignoring the first 4 (or 6) characters of the 10 character string.
You could try encoding in base 36 instead of 16. This will get you to 7 characters or less.
> return math.log(10 ^ 10) / math.log(36)
6.4254860446923
The popular base 64 encoding will get you to 6 characters
> return math.log(10 ^ 10) / math.log(64)
5.5365468248123
Even Ascii85 encoding won't get you down to 5.
> return math.log(10 ^ 10) / math.log(85)
5.1829075929158
You need base 100 to get to 5 characters
> return math.log(10 ^ 10) / math.log(100)
5
There aren't 100 printable ASCII characters, so this is not going to work, as zkhr explained as well, unless you're willing to go beyond ASCII.
I found your question interesting (although I don't claim to know the answer) - I googled a bit for you out of interest and found this which may help you http://dpatrickcaldwell.blogspot.com/2009/05/converting-decimal-to-hexadecimal-with.html