base (version 3.6.2)

Random: Random Number Generation

Description

.Random.seed is an integer vector, containing the random number generator (RNG) state for random number generation in R. It can be saved and restored, but should not be altered by the user.

RNGkind is a more friendly interface to query or set the kind of RNG in use.

RNGversion can be used to set the random generators as they were in an earlier R version (for reproducibility).

set.seed is the recommended way to specify seeds.

Usage

.Random.seed <- c(rng.kind, n1, n2, \dots)

RNGkind(kind = NULL, normal.kind = NULL, sample.kind = NULL) RNGversion(vstr) set.seed(seed, kind = NULL, normal.kind = NULL, sample.kind = NULL)

Arguments

kind

character or NULL. If kind is a character string, set R's RNG to the kind desired. Use "default" to return to the R default. See ‘Details’ for the interpretation of NULL.

normal.kind

character string or NULL. If it is a character string, set the method of Normal generation. Use "default" to return to the R default. NULL makes no change.

sample.kind

character string or NULL. If it is a character string, set the method of discrete uniform generation (used in sample, for instance). Use "default" to return to the R default. NULL makes no change.

seed

a single value, interpreted as an integer, or NULL (see ‘Details’).

vstr

a character string containing a version number, e.g., "1.6.2". The default RNG configuration of the current R version is used if vstr is greater than the current version.

rng.kind

integer code in 0:k for the above kind.

n1, n2, …

integers. See the details for how many are required (which depends on rng.kind).

Value

.Random.seed is an integer vector whose first element codes the kind of RNG and normal generator. The lowest two decimal digits are in 0:(k-1) where k is the number of available RNGs. The hundreds represent the type of normal generator (starting at 0), and the ten thousands represent the type of discrete uniform sampler.

In the underlying C, .Random.seed[-1] is unsigned; therefore in R .Random.seed[-1] can be negative, due to the representation of an unsigned integer by a signed integer.

RNGkind returns a three-element character vector of the RNG, normal and sample kinds selected before the call, invisibly if either argument is not NULL. A type starts a session as the default, and is selected either by a call to RNGkind or by setting .Random.seed in the workspace. (NB: prior to R 3.6.0 the first two kinds were returned in a two-element character vector.)

RNGversion returns the same information as RNGkind about the defaults in a specific R version.

set.seed returns NULL, invisibly.

Details

The currently available RNG kinds are given below. kind is partially matched to this list. The default is "Mersenne-Twister".

"Wichmann-Hill"

The seed, .Random.seed[-1] == r[1:3] is an integer vector of length 3, where each r[i] is in 1:(p[i] - 1), where p is the length 3 vector of primes, p = (30269, 30307, 30323). The Wichmann--Hill generator has a cycle length of \(6.9536 \times 10^{12}\) (= prod(p-1)/4, see Applied Statistics (1984) 33, 123 which corrects the original article).

"Marsaglia-Multicarry":

A multiply-with-carry RNG is used, as recommended by George Marsaglia in his post to the mailing list sci.stat.math. It has a period of more than \(2^{60}\) and has passed all tests (according to Marsaglia). The seed is two integers (all values allowed).

"Super-Duper":

Marsaglia's famous Super-Duper from the 70's. This is the original version which does not pass the MTUPLE test of the Diehard battery. It has a period of \(\approx 4.6\times 10^{18}\) for most initial seeds. The seed is two integers (all values allowed for the first seed: the second must be odd).

We use the implementation by Reeds et al (1982--84).

The two seeds are the Tausworthe and congruence long integers, respectively. A one-to-one mapping to S's .Random.seed[1:12] is possible but we will not publish one, not least as this generator is not exactly the same as that in recent versions of S-PLUS.

"Mersenne-Twister":

From Matsumoto and Nishimura (1998); code updated in 2002. A twisted GFSR with period \(2^{19937} - 1\) and equidistribution in 623 consecutive dimensions (over the whole period). The ‘seed’ is a 624-dimensional set of 32-bit integers plus a current position in that set.

R uses its own initialization method due to B. D. Ripley and is not affected by the initialization issue in the 1998 code of Matsumoto and Nishimura addressed in a 2002 update.

"Knuth-TAOCP-2002":

A 32-bit integer GFSR using lagged Fibonacci sequences with subtraction. That is, the recurrence used is $$X_j = (X_{j-100} - X_{j-37}) \bmod 2^{30}% $$ and the ‘seed’ is the set of the 100 last numbers (actually recorded as 101 numbers, the last being a cyclic shift of the buffer). The period is around \(2^{129}\).

"Knuth-TAOCP":

An earlier version from Knuth (1997).

The 2002 version was not backwards compatible with the earlier version: the initialization of the GFSR from the seed was altered. R did not allow you to choose consecutive seeds, the reported ‘weakness’, and already scrambled the seeds.

Initialization of this generator is done in interpreted R code and so takes a short but noticeable time.

"L'Ecuyer-CMRG":

A ‘combined multiple-recursive generator’ from L'Ecuyer (1999), each element of which is a feedback multiplicative generator with three integer elements: thus the seed is a (signed) integer vector of length 6. The period is around \(2^{191}\).

The 6 elements of the seed are internally regarded as 32-bit unsigned integers. Neither the first three nor the last three should be all zero, and they are limited to less than 4294967087 and 4294944443 respectively.

This is not particularly interesting of itself, but provides the basis for the multiple streams used in package parallel.

"user-supplied":

Use a user-supplied generator. See Random.user for details.

normal.kind can be "Kinderman-Ramage", "Buggy Kinderman-Ramage" (not for set.seed), "Ahrens-Dieter", "Box-Muller", "Inversion" (the default), or "user-supplied". (For inversion, see the reference in qnorm.) The Kinderman-Ramage generator used in versions prior to 1.7.0 (now called "Buggy") had several approximation errors and should only be used for reproduction of old results. The "Box-Muller" generator is stateful as pairs of normals are generated and returned sequentially. The state is reset whenever it is selected (even if it is the current normal generator) and when kind is changed.

sample.kind can be "Rounding" or "Rejection", or partial matches to these. The former was the default in versions prior to 3.6.0: it made sample noticeably non-uniform on large populations, and should only be used for reproduction of old results. See 17494 for a discussion.

set.seed uses a single integer argument to set as many seeds as are required. It is intended as a simple way to get quite different seeds by specifying small integer arguments, and also as a way to get valid seed sets for the more complicated methods (especially "Mersenne-Twister" and "Knuth-TAOCP"). There is no guarantee that different values of seed will seed the RNG differently, although any exceptions would be extremely rare. If called with seed = NULL it re-initializes (see ‘Note’) as if no seed had yet been set.

The use of kind = NULL, normal.kind = NULL or sample.kind = NULL in RNGkind or set.seed selects the currently-used generator (including that used in the previous session if the workspace has been restored): if no generator has been used it selects "default".

References

Ahrens, J. H. and Dieter, U. (1973). Extensions of Forsythe's method for random sampling from the normal distribution. Mathematics of Computation, 27, 927--937.

Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988). The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. (set.seed, storing in .Random.seed.)

Box, G. E. P. and Muller, M. E. (1958). A note on the generation of normal random deviates. Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 29, 610--611. 10.1214/aoms/1177706645.

De Matteis, A. and Pagnutti, S. (1993). Long-range Correlation Analysis of the Wichmann-Hill Random Number Generator. Statistics and Computing, 3, 67--70. 10.1007/BF00153065.

Kinderman, A. J. and Ramage, J. G. (1976). Computer generation of normal random variables. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 71, 893--896. 10.2307/2286857.

Knuth, D. E. (1997). The Art of Computer Programming. Volume 2, third edition. Source code at http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/taocp.html.

Knuth, D. E. (2002). The Art of Computer Programming. Volume 2, third edition, ninth printing.

L'Ecuyer, P. (1999). Good parameters and implementations for combined multiple recursive random number generators. Operations Research, 47, 159--164. 10.1287/opre.47.1.159.

Marsaglia, G. (1997). A random number generator for C. Discussion paper, posting on Usenet newsgroup sci.stat.math on September 29, 1997.

Marsaglia, G. and Zaman, A. (1994). Some portable very-long-period random number generators. Computers in Physics, 8, 117--121. 10.1063/1.168514.

Matsumoto, M. and Nishimura, T. (1998). Mersenne Twister: A 623-dimensionally equidistributed uniform pseudo-random number generator, ACM Transactions on Modeling and Computer Simulation, 8, 3--30. Source code formerly at http://www.math.keio.ac.jp/~matumoto/emt.html. Now see http://www.math.sci.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/~m-mat/MT/VERSIONS/C-LANG/c-lang.html.

Reeds, J., Hubert, S. and Abrahams, M. (1982--4). C implementation of SuperDuper, University of California at Berkeley. (Personal communication from Jim Reeds to Ross Ihaka.)

Wichmann, B. A. and Hill, I. D. (1982). Algorithm AS 183: An Efficient and Portable Pseudo-random Number Generator. Applied Statistics, 31, 188--190; Remarks: 34, 198 and 35, 89. 10.2307/2347988.

See Also

sample for random sampling with and without replacement.

Distributions for functions for random-variate generation from standard distributions.

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
require(stats)

## Seed the current RNG, i.e., set the RNG status
set.seed(42); u1 <- runif(30)
set.seed(42); u2 <- runif(30) # the same because of identical RNG status:
stopifnot(identical(u1, u2))

# }
# NOT RUN {
## the default random seed is 626 integers, so only print a few
 runif(1); .Random.seed[1:6]; runif(1); .Random.seed[1:6]
 ## If there is no seed, a "random" new one is created:
 rm(.Random.seed); runif(1); .Random.seed[1:6]
# }
# NOT RUN {
ok <- RNGkind()
RNGkind("Wich")  # (partial string matching on 'kind')

## This shows how 'runif(.)' works for Wichmann-Hill,
## using only R functions:

p.WH <- c(30269, 30307, 30323)
a.WH <- c(  171,   172,   170)
next.WHseed <- function(i.seed = .Random.seed[-1])
  { (a.WH * i.seed) %% p.WH }
my.runif1 <- function(i.seed = .Random.seed)
  { ns <- next.WHseed(i.seed[-1]); sum(ns / p.WH) %% 1 }
set.seed(1998-12-04)# (when the next lines were added to the souRce)
rs <- .Random.seed
(WHs <- next.WHseed(rs[-1]))
u <- runif(1)
stopifnot(
 next.WHseed(rs[-1]) == .Random.seed[-1],
 all.equal(u, my.runif1(rs))
)

## ----
.Random.seed
RNGkind("Super") # matches  "Super-Duper"
RNGkind()
.Random.seed # new, corresponding to  Super-Duper

## Reset:
RNGkind(ok[1])

RNGversion(getRversion()) # the default version for this R version

## ----
sum(duplicated(runif(1e6))) # around 110 for default generator
## and we would expect about almost sure duplicates beyond about
qbirthday(1 - 1e-6, classes = 2e9) # 235,000
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataCamp Workspace