So here is one of the simplest things one might do:
Random rng = new Random();
int a = rng.nextInt(10);
int b = rng.nextInt(10);
So far so good. But we want to avoid having equal a and b, so naturally we do:
Random rng = new Random();
int a =开发者_开发百科 rng.nextInt(10);
int b = rng.nextInt(10);
while (a == b){
b = rng.nextInt(10);
}
However — to my very very very big surprise — the while loop never exits. Never.
I understand that, in theory, with random numbers you could have an infinite sequence of one number. But I've had this code running for 10 minutes now and it hasn't exited the loop.
What's up with this? I'm running JDK 6 Update 16 on the latest Linux Mint.
Random rng = new Random();
int a = rng.nextInt(10);
int b = rng.nextInt(9);
if (b >= a) ++b;
Problem solved!
I don't know why this would be happening -- I tried it in 1.6.0_16 for Windows and had no problems. Here's the complete class:
import java.util.Random;
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random rng = new Random();
int a = rng.nextInt(10);
int b = rng.nextInt(10);
while (a == b){
System.out.println(b + " is equal to " + a + "!");
b = rng.nextInt(10);
}
System.out.println(a);
System.out.println(b);
}
}
Sometimes I'll get the "a is equal to b!" output once or twice in a row, but then it works after that.
Practically, it should work. Something wrong with your environment.
However, theoretically, we can't predict what random is; it is legit if a random generator gives you the same number one million times in a row. To have a deterministic code, you can do this:
int a = rng.nextInt(10);
int b = rng.nextInt( 9);
b = (a+b+1)%10;
You might try setting the seed to something else to see if that helps.
rng.setSeed(123456);
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