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A new classification method for RNGs: Significance Level

joe
My experiments show that the random number generator
in Microsoft's VC++6 compiler is a statistical RNG with a
significance level 1.0%.
Statistical testing at SL >1.0% (for example 1.001%) passes the test,
but 1.0% does not pass...

Can anybody confirm this finding?

The RNG function of the various SW products can be
analyzed and classified better using its significance level
as shown above.
I think this IMO important finding deserves a deeper research... :-)

For the testing method see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binomial_test
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binomial_distribution

Jul 11 '08
26 1218
[attribs tidied up a bit, distracting dates/times removed, email addresses
restored - your newsreader (and Pete's) should not have removed them]

vi******@gmail. com said:
Pete Becker wrote:
>vi******@gmail. com said:
Pete Becker wrote:
vi******@gmail. com said:
Pete Becker wrote:
On 2008-07-12 22:59:09 -0400, "joe" <jo*@iamnotatho me.org.invalid>
said:
<snip>
>>
>>>>int genrand(unsigne d range)
{ // generates random number between 0 and range-1
// range can be maximally RAND_MAX + 1
// THIS IS THE RECOMMENDED CORRECT METHOD
// (recommended by me and others :-)
>>>>if (range < 2)
return 0;
if (range (RAND_MAX + 1))
range = RAND_MAX + 1;
>>>This last step isn't right.
<snip>
It's redundant, but not wrong.
>How is it redundant? If the caller asks for a range that's larger
than this distribution can handle and this check isn't present, the
algorithm will not return values that cover the requested range.
Whether that second if is present or not, the behavior of the
algorithm is the same.

It should produce an error. The fact that it doesn't means it's wrong,
not that it's redundant.
You're wrong.
Pete Becker is an experienced programmer with an excellent track record.
That doesn't automatically make him right, but it does mean that in a
tis-tisnt between him and anonymous-you, the wise reader will give more
weight to him than to you. You may be correct to claim that he is wrong,
but to make the claim without explaining *why* he's wrong is not going to
win the argument for you.

I suggest that you explain exactly what you think Pete Becker is claiming,
and exactly why you think he's wrong, with reference to the Standard. If
you have a point, I'm sure that Pete will be the first to concede it - but
as things stand at present, the ball is in your court, not his.

--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk >
Email: -http://www. +rjh@
Google users: <http://www.cpax.org.uk/prg/writings/googly.php>
"Usenet is a strange place" - dmr 29 July 1999
Jul 13 '08 #21
In article <48************ *************** *******@k13g200 0hse.googlegrou ps.com>,
<vi******@gmail .comwrote:
>On Jul 13, 6:48 pm, Pete Becker <p...@versatile coding.comwrote :
>It should produce an error. The fact that it doesn't means it's wrong,
not that it's redundant.
>You're wrong.
"right" or "wrong" in situations like this depend upon the
documented requirements upon the function. I've looked back through the
thread, but I can't seem to find any statement of what *exactly* the
function is supposed to do under which circumstances, so we cannot
say for sure what is "right" or "wrong" code to implement the function.
*Any* code that was standard conforming could be given as an
implementation of the function, and we have no firm grounds upon which to
say that the code is "wrong".

When there are no documented requirements for a function,
perceptions of "right" or "wrong" depend strongly upon
"reasonable expectations" of what the function would do. And it
seems to me that for -most- people, the "reasonable expectation"
of behaviour if the function cannot deliver the request range of
values is some kind of indication that there was a parameter problem.
It is my belief that relatively few people would have the
"reasonable expectation" that the function would instead quietly
deliver only a subset of the requested values. Yes, it is true that
*by chance* a random number generator run for several runs might not
-happen- to generate values greater than a certain value, but as
the number of runs increases, the probability of that happening
becomes statistically small enough that we can reasonably make
judgements about whether the function really is producing a
uniform random distribution.
--
"The beauties of conception are always superior to those of
expression." -- Walter J. Phillips
Jul 13 '08 #22
On Jul 13, 5:48 pm, Pete Becker <p...@versatile coding.comwrote :
On 2008-07-13 10:11:09 -0400, vipps...@gmail. com said:
[...]
How is it redundant? If the caller asks for a range that's
larger than this distribution can handle and this check
isn't present, the algorithm will not return values that
cover the requested range.
Whether that second if is present or not, the behavior of
the algorithm is the same.
It should produce an error. The fact that it doesn't means
it's wrong, not that it's redundant.
From a quality of implementation point of view. Formally, the
contract is to return a number in the given range. The single
statement "return 0;" meets that requirement, and you don't need
all of this extra testing:-).

Of course, the specification did state that the "range can be
maximally RAND_MAX + 1", so normally, I would expect an
assertion failure if my argument wasn't in this range. Or
totally undefined behavior, but not the function arbitrarily
changing my argument.

--
James Kanze (GABI Software) email:ja******* **@gmail.com
Conseils en informatique orientée objet/
Beratung in objektorientier ter Datenverarbeitu ng
9 place Sémard, 78210 St.-Cyr-l'École, France, +33 (0)1 30 23 00 34
Jul 13 '08 #23
James Kanze <ja*********@gm ail.comwrites:
[...]
Of course, the specification did state that the "range can be
maximally RAND_MAX + 1", so normally, I would expect an
assertion failure if my argument wasn't in this range. Or
totally undefined behavior, but not the function arbitrarily
changing my argument.
Surely arbitrarily changing the argument *is* an example of "totally
undefined behavior".

semi-8-)}

--
Keith Thompson (The_Other_Keit h) ks***@mib.org <http://www.ghoti.net/~kst>
Nokia
"We must do something. This is something. Therefore, we must do this."
-- Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn, "Yes Minister"
Jul 14 '08 #24
On Jul 14, 6:26 pm, Keith Thompson <ks...@mib.orgw rote:
James Kanze <james.ka...@gm ail.comwrites:
[...]
Of course, the specification did state that the "range can be
maximally RAND_MAX + 1", so normally, I would expect an
assertion failure if my argument wasn't in this range. Or
totally undefined behavior, but not the function arbitrarily
changing my argument.
Surely arbitrarily changing the argument *is* an example of "totally
undefined behavior".
When undefined behavior occurs, anything the program does is
correct. But from a quality of implementation point of view, we
don't normally expect it to go out of the way to make things
worse; *IF* the code detects the error, it should treat it as an
error.

--
James Kanze (GABI Software) email:ja******* **@gmail.com
Conseils en informatique orientée objet/
Beratung in objektorientier ter Datenverarbeitu ng
9 place Sémard, 78210 St.-Cyr-l'École, France, +33 (0)1 30 23 00 34
Jul 15 '08 #25
James Kanze <ja*********@gm ail.comwrites:
On Jul 14, 6:26 pm, Keith Thompson <ks...@mib.orgw rote:
>James Kanze <james.ka...@gm ail.comwrites:
>[...]
Of course, the specification did state that the "range can be
maximally RAND_MAX + 1", so normally, I would expect an
assertion failure if my argument wasn't in this range. Or
totally undefined behavior, but not the function arbitrarily
changing my argument.
>Surely arbitrarily changing the argument *is* an example of "totally
undefined behavior".

When undefined behavior occurs, anything the program does is
correct. But from a quality of implementation point of view, we
don't normally expect it to go out of the way to make things
worse; *IF* the code detects the error, it should treat it as an
error.
Certainly.

By snipping the smiley, you've made it appear that I was making a
serious point. I wasn't.

--
Keith Thompson (The_Other_Keit h) ks***@mib.org <http://www.ghoti.net/~kst>
Nokia
"We must do something. This is something. Therefore, we must do this."
-- Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn, "Yes Minister"
Jul 15 '08 #26
On Jul 15, 5:21 pm, Keith Thompson <ks...@mib.orgw rote:
James Kanze <james.ka...@gm ail.comwrites:
On Jul 14, 6:26 pm, Keith Thompson <ks...@mib.orgw rote:
James Kanze <james.ka...@gm ail.comwrites:
[...]
Of course, the specification did state that the "range can be
maximally RAND_MAX + 1", so normally, I would expect an
assertion failure if my argument wasn't in this range. Or
totally undefined behavior, but not the function arbitrarily
changing my argument.
Surely arbitrarily changing the argument *is* an example of "totally
undefined behavior".
When undefined behavior occurs, anything the program does is
correct. But from a quality of implementation point of view, we
don't normally expect it to go out of the way to make things
worse; *IF* the code detects the error, it should treat it as an
error.
Certainly.
By snipping the smiley, you've made it appear that I was making a
serious point. I wasn't.
Sorry. I missed the smiley. So it looks like we're in violent
agreement.

--
James Kanze (GABI Software) email:ja******* **@gmail.com
Conseils en informatique orientée objet/
Beratung in objektorientier ter Datenverarbeitu ng
9 place Sémard, 78210 St.-Cyr-l'École, France, +33 (0)1 30 23 00 34
Jul 15 '08 #27

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