You want to make random numbers in a given range, inclusive, such as when you randomly pick an array index, simulate rolling a die in a game of chance, or generate a random password.
This code generates and prints a random integer between 25 and 75, inclusive:
$random = int( rand(51)) + 25; print "$random\n";
The
rand
function returns a fractional number, from (and including) 0 up to (but not including) its argument. We give it an argument of 51 to get a number that can be 0 or more, but never 51 or more. We take the integer portion of this to get a number from 0 to 50, inclusive (50.99999.... will be turned to 50 by
int
). We then add 25 to it, to get a number from 25 to 75, inclusive.
A common application of this is the random selection of an element from an array:
$elt = $array[ rand @array ];
And generating a random password from a sequence of characters:
@chars = ( "A" .. "Z", "a" .. "z", 0 .. 9, qw(! @ $ % ^ & *) ); $password = join("", @chars[ map { rand @chars } ( 1 .. 8 ) ]);
We use
map
to generate eight random indices into
@chars
, extract the corresponding characters with a slice, and join them together to form the random password. This isn't a
good
random number, though, as its security relies on the choice of seed, which is based on the time the program started. See
Recipe 2.8
for a way to better seed your random number generator.
The
int
,
rand
,
map
, and
join
functions in
perlfunc
(1) and
Chapter 3
of
Programming Perl
; we explore random numbers further in Recipes
Recipe 2.8
,
Recipe 2.9
, and
Recipe 2.10
; we use random numbers in
Recipe 1.9
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