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How to generate a random int in C? - Stack Overflow Many implementations of rand() cycle through a short list of numbers, and the low bits have shorter cycles The way that some programs call rand() is awful, and calculating a good seed to pass to srand() is hard The best way to generate random numbers in C is to use a third-party library like OpenSSL For example,
c++ - How does modulus and rand () work? - Stack Overflow A second lesson is that this shows another way in which <random> is easier to use than rand() and manually computing your own distributions The built-in uniform_int_distribution allows you to directly state the desired, inclusive range
c - How does srand relate to rand function? - Stack Overflow printf("%d\n", rand() % 50); Where is the connection between rand and srand? What I mean or expect is I assume rand () will get some parameter from srand () so it knows to generate different numbers each time I assume it would look something like rand (srand (time (null)); It's like initializing a variable without using it to me srand is being initialized, but I don't see it being used Does
Generate a value between 0. 0 and 1. 0 using rand () - Stack Overflow The OP's reasoning for trying it was wrong, but had this been necessary, the UB could've been avoided by adding 1 0 instead of 1, which would coerce RAND_MAX to double type and so avoid the integer overflow
c - Rand Implementation - Stack Overflow rand and srand are usually implemented as a simple LCG, you can easily write your own (it's few lines of code) without looking for the sources of rand and srand Notice that, if you need random numbers for "serious" purposes (e g cryptography), there are much better RNGs than LCG By the way, the C standard itself includes a sample implementation of rand and srand: