1. In C ++, the random () function cannot be used as a non-ansi c standard and cannot be compiled by GCC, Vc, or other compilers. You can use the rand function in C ++. 1. The C ++ standard function library provides a random number generator Rand, which returns a pseudo random integer evenly distributed between 0 and rand_max. Rand_max must be 32767 at least. The rand () function does not accept parameters. The default value is 1 (the start value ). The random number generator always starts with the same seed, so the pseudo-random sequence is also the same, without the random meaning. (But this facilitates program debugging) 2. In C ++, another function srand () can specify different numbers (unsigned integer yuan) as seeds. However, if the seeds are the same, the pseudo-random sequence is also the same. One way is to let the user input seeds, but it is still not ideal. 3. It is ideal to use a variable number, such as time, as the seed of the random number generator. The value of time varies every moment. So the seeds are different, so the random numbers are also different. // C ++ random function (VC Program) # Include <stdio. h> # Include <iostream> # Include <time. h> Using namespace STD; # Deprecision max 100 Int main (INT argc, char * argv []) {Srand (unsigned) Time (null); // The srand () function generates a Random Seed starting from the current time. It should be placed before loop statements such as for. Otherwise it will take a long time to wait. For (INT I = 0; I <10; I ++) Cout <rand () % max <Endl; // Max is the maximum value, and its random field is 0 ~ MAX-1 Return 0; } Ii. Rand () Usage Rand () does not require a parameter. It returns an arbitrary integer from 0 to the maximum random number. The maximum random number is usually a fixed large integer. In this way, if you want to generate 0 ~ 10 integers, which can be expressed: Int n = rand () % 11; In this way, the value of N is a 0 ~ A random number of 10 ~ 10, it is like this: Int n = 1 + rand () % 11; In summary, it can be expressed: A + rand () % N Where a is the starting value and N is the range of integers. A + rand () % (B-A + 1) indicates ~ If a random number between B is 0 ~ 1 decimal point, you can first get 0 ~ Then, divide all the values by 10 to get the 10 random decimal places from random to very. To get the random decimal places from random to percentile, you must first get 0 ~ The 10 Integers of 100 are all divided by 100. This type of push. Generally, the random numbers generated by rand () are the same as the previous one during each operation. This design is intended to facilitate program debugging. To generate different random numbers each time, you can use the srand (SEED) function for randomization. Different random numbers can be generated as the seed varies. As you said, it can also contain time. h header file, and then use srand (time (0) to use the current time to randomize the random number generator, in this way, different random number sequences can be obtained every two runs (as long as the interval between two runs exceeds 1 second ). |