From: | Einar Karttunen <ekarttun(at)cs(dot)Helsinki(dot)FI> |
---|---|
To: | <ghaverla(at)freenet(dot)edmonton(dot)ab(dot)ca> |
Cc: | macky <macky(at)edsamail(dot)com>, <pgsql-novice(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: Re: RANDOM function? |
Date: | 2001-07-31 12:58:24 |
Message-ID: | Pine.LNX.4.33.0107311541140.19887-100000@melkinpaasi.cs.Helsinki.FI |
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Lists: | pgsql-novice |
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001 ghaverla(at)freenet(dot)edmonton(dot)ab(dot)ca wrote:
>
> On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, macky wrote:
>
> > if ill be using big range of numbers sa 10000 woundd the be any possibility
> > to have multiple items... meaning lets say 1234 will show up more than once?
>
> It sounds like you are trying to draw a number from a finite
> supply, WITHOUT REPLACEMENT. I don't know how to attach
> an external C (perl, ...?) function to PostgreSQL, but
> I think you'll end up doing this.
>
> Some of what I am describing can be done "virtually".
> You will need to set up an array (stack, list) containing
> all the possible integers you want to draw from. Say
> 1, 2, 3, .... 100000. Note that there are 100000
> elements in the stack. Now, draw a random (0 - 1)
> floating point number. If the 0-1 deviate lies between
> (i-1)/N and i/N (where N is how many integers are in
> our stack, and i is an index), we will withdraw the
> i'th value from the stack as our random number (leaving
> us with N-1 values in the stack). We continuous to
> withdraw numbers in this manner until we have either
> withdrawn enough numbers, or we have exhausted the stack.
>
That sounds very hard to implement effeciently. Could you send me some
high level pseudocode? I think that a with 31 bit random integers the
probablity to get the same value is very very small. If it is too big
I can always change to bigints.
- Einar Karttunen
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