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Is there a way to generate a random number in a specified range with JavaScript ?
For example: a specified range from 1 to 6 were the random number could be either 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6.
function randomIntFromInterval(min, max) { // min and max included
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1) + min)
}
const rndInt = randomIntFromInterval(1, 6)
console.log(rndInt)
What it does "extra" is it allows random intervals that do not start with 1.
So you can get a random number from 10 to 15 for example. Flexibility.
Important
The following code works only if the minimum value is `1`. It does not work for minimum values other than `1`.
If you wanted to get a random integer between 1 (and only 1) and 6, you would calculate:
const rndInt = Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1
console.log(rndInt)
Where:
1 is the start number
6 is the number of possible results (1 + start (6) - end (1))
Math.random()
Returns an integer random number between min (included) and max (included):
function randomInteger(min, max) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
Or any random number between min (included) and max (not included):
function randomNumber(min, max) {
return Math.random() * (max - min) + min;
}
Useful examples (integers):
// 0 -> 10
Math.floor(Math.random() * 11);
// 1 -> 10
Math.floor(Math.random() * 10) + 1;
// 5 -> 20
Math.floor(Math.random() * 16) + 5;
// -10 -> (-2)
Math.floor(Math.random() * 9) - 10;
** And always nice to be reminded (Mozilla):
Math.random() does not provide cryptographically secure random
numbers. Do not use them for anything related to security. Use the Web
Crypto API instead, and more precisely the
window.crypto.getRandomValues() method.
Other solutions:
(Math.random() * 6 | 0) + 1
~~(Math.random() * 6) + 1
Try online
TL;DR
function generateRandomInteger(min, max) {
return Math.floor(min + Math.random()*(max - min + 1))
}
To get the random number
generateRandomInteger(-20, 20);
EXPLANATION BELOW
integer - A number which is not a fraction; a whole number
We need to get a random number , say X between min and max.
X, min and max are all integers
i.e
min <= X <= max
If we subtract min from the equation, this is equivalent to
0 <= (X - min) <= (max - min)
Now, lets multiply this with a random number r
which is
0 <= (X - min) * r <= (max - min) * r
Now, lets add back min to the equation
min <= min + (X - min) * r <= min + (max - min) * r
For, any given X, the above equation satisfies only when r has range of [0,1] For any other values of r the above equation is unsatisfied.
Learn more about ranges [x,y] or (x,y) here
Our next step is to find a function which always results in a value which has a range of [0,1]
Now, the range of r i.e [0,1] is very similar to Math.random() function in Javascript. Isn't it?
The Math.random() function returns a floating-point, pseudo-random
number in the range [0, 1); that is, from 0 (inclusive) up to but not
including 1 (exclusive)
Random Function using Math.random() 0 <= r < 1
Notice that in Math.random() left bound is inclusive and the right bound is exclusive. This means min + (max - min) * r will evaluate to having a range from [min, max)
To include our right bound i.e [min,max] we increase the right bound by 1 and floor the result.
function generateRandomInteger(min, max) {
return Math.floor(min + Math.random()*(max - min + 1))
}
To get the random number
generateRandomInteger(-20, 20);
Or, in Underscore
_.random(min, max)
var x = 6; // can be any number
var rand = Math.floor(Math.random()*x) + 1;
jsfiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/cyGwf/477/
Random Integer: to get a random integer between min and max, use the following code
function getRandomInteger(min, max) {
min = Math.ceil(min);
max = Math.floor(max);
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min)) + min;
}
Random Floating Point Number: to get a random floating point number between min and max, use the following code
function getRandomFloat(min, max) {
return Math.random() * (max - min) + min;
}
Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Math/random
Math is not my strong point, but I've been working on a project where I needed to generate a lot of random numbers between both positive and negative.
function randomBetween(min, max) {
if (min < 0) {
return min + Math.random() * (Math.abs(min)+max);
}else {
return min + Math.random() * max;
}
}
E.g
randomBetween(-10,15)//or..
randomBetween(10,20)//or...
randomBetween(-200,-100)
Of course, you can also add some validation to make sure you don't do this with anything other than numbers. Also make sure that min is always less than or equal to max.
Get a random integer between 0 and 400
let rand = Math.round(Math.random() * 400)
document.write(rand)
Get a random integer between 200 and 1500
let range = {min: 200, max: 1500}
let delta = range.max - range.min
const rand = Math.round(range.min + Math.random() * delta)
document.write(rand)
Using functions
function randBetween(min, max){
let delta = max - min
return Math.round(min + Math.random() * delta)
}
document.write(randBetween(10, 15));
// JavaScript ES6 arrow function
const randBetween = (min, max) => {
let delta = max - min
return Math.round(min + Math.random() * delta)
}
document.write(randBetween(10, 20))
I wrote more flexible function which can give you random number but not only integer.
function rand(min,max,interval)
{
if (typeof(interval)==='undefined') interval = 1;
var r = Math.floor(Math.random()*(max-min+interval)/interval);
return r*interval+min;
}
var a = rand(0,10); //can be 0, 1, 2 (...) 9, 10
var b = rand(4,6,0.1); //can be 4.0, 4.1, 4.2 (...) 5.9, 6.0
Fixed version.
ES6 / Arrow functions version based on Francis' code (i.e. the top answer):
const randomIntFromInterval = (min, max) => Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1) + min);
Example
Return a random number between 1 and 10:
Math.floor((Math.random() * 10) + 1);
The result could be:
3
Try yourself: here
--
or using lodash / undescore:
_.random(min, max)
Docs:
- lodash
- undescore
The top rated solution is not mathematically correct as same as comments under it -> Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1.
Task: generate random number between 1 and 6.
Math.random() returns floating point number between 0 and 1 (like 0.344717274374 or 0.99341293123 for example), which we will use as a percentage, so Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1 returns some percentage of 6 (max: 5, min: 0) and adds 1. The author got lucky that lower bound was 1., because percentage floor will "maximumly" return 5 which is less than 6 by 1, and that 1 will be added by lower bound 1.
The problems occurs when lower bound is greater than 1. For instance,
Task: generate random between 2 and 6.
(following author's logic)
Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 2, it is obviously seen that if we get 5 here -> Math.random() * 6 and then add 2, the outcome will be 7 which goes beyond the desired boundary of 6.
Another example,
Task: generate random between 10 and 12.
(following author's logic)
Math.floor(Math.random() * 12) + 10, (sorry for repeating) it is obvious that we are getting 0%-99% percent of number "12", which will go way beyond desired boundary of 12.
So, the correct logic is to take the difference between lower bound and upper bound add 1, and only then floor it (to substract 1, because Math.random() returns 0 - 0.99, so no way to get full upper bound, thats why we adding 1 to upper bound to get maximumly 99% of (upper bound + 1) and then we floor it to get rid of excess). Once we got the floored percentage of (difference + 1), we can add lower boundary to get the desired randomed number between 2 numbers.
The logic formula for that will be: Math.floor(Math.random() * ((up_boundary - low_boundary) + 1)) + 10.
P.s.: Even comments under the top-rated answer were incorrect, since people forgot to add 1 to the difference, meaning that they will never get the up boundary (yes it might be a case if they dont want to get it at all, but the requirenment was to include the upper boundary).
I was searching random number generator written in TypeScript and I have written this after reading all of the answers, hope It would work for TypeScript coders.
Rand(min: number, max: number): number {
return (Math.random() * (max - min + 1) | 0) + min;
}
Inspite of many answers and almost same result. I would like to add my answer and explain its working. Because it is important to understand its working rather than copy pasting one line code. Generating random numbers is nothing but simple maths.
CODE:
function getR(lower, upper) {
var percent = (Math.random() * 100);
// this will return number between 0-99 because Math.random returns decimal number from 0-0.9929292 something like that
//now you have a percentage, use it find out the number between your INTERVAL :upper-lower
var num = ((percent * (upper - lower) / 100));
//num will now have a number that falls in your INTERVAL simple maths
num += lower;
//add lower to make it fall in your INTERVAL
//but num is still in decimal
//use Math.floor>downward to its nearest integer you won't get upper value ever
//use Math.ceil>upward to its nearest integer upper value is possible
//Math.round>to its nearest integer 2.4>2 2.5>3 both lower and upper value possible
console.log(Math.floor(num), Math.ceil(num), Math.round(num));
}
Math.random() is fast and suitable for many purposes, but it's not appropriate if you need cryptographically-secure values (it's not secure), or if you need integers from a completely uniform unbiased distribution (the multiplication approach used in others answers produces certain values slightly more often than others).
In such cases, we can use crypto.getRandomValues() to generate secure integers, and reject any generated values that we can't map uniformly into the target range. This will be slower, but it shouldn't be significant unless you're generating extremely large numbers of values.
To clarify the biased distribution concern, consider the case where we want to generate a value between 1 and 5, but we have a random number generator that produces values between 1 and 16 (a 4-bit value). We want to have the same number of generated values mapping to each output value, but 16 does not evenly divide by 5: it leaves a remainder of 1. So we need to reject 1 of the possible generated values, and only continue when we get one of the 15 lesser values that can be uniformly mapped into our target range. Our behaviour could look like this pseudocode:
Generate a 4-bit integer in the range 1-16.
If we generated 1, 6, or 11 then output 1.
If we generated 2, 7, or 12 then output 2.
If we generated 3, 8, or 13 then output 3.
If we generated 4, 9, or 14 then output 4.
If we generated 5, 10, or 15 then output 5.
If we generated 16 then reject it and try again.
The following code uses similar logic, but generates a 32-bit integer instead, because that's the largest common integer size that can be represented by JavaScript's standard number type. (This could be modified to use BigInts if you need a larger range.) Regardless of the chosen range, the fraction of generated values that are rejected will always be less than 0.5, so the expected number of rejections will always be less than 1.0 and usually close to 0.0; you don't need to worry about it looping forever.
const randomInteger = (min, max) => {
const range = max - min;
const maxGeneratedValue = 0xFFFFFFFF;
const possibleResultValues = range + 1;
const possibleGeneratedValues = maxGeneratedValue + 1;
const remainder = possibleGeneratedValues % possibleResultValues;
const maxUnbiased = maxGeneratedValue - remainder;
if (!Number.isInteger(min) || !Number.isInteger(max) ||
max > Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER || min < Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER) {
throw new Error('Arguments must be safe integers.');
} else if (range > maxGeneratedValue) {
throw new Error(`Range of ${range} (from ${min} to ${max}) > ${maxGeneratedValue}.`);
} else if (max < min) {
throw new Error(`max (${max}) must be >= min (${min}).`);
} else if (min === max) {
return min;
}
let generated;
do {
generated = crypto.getRandomValues(new Uint32Array(1))[0];
} while (generated > maxUnbiased);
return min + (generated % possibleResultValues);
};
console.log(randomInteger(-8, 8)); // -2
console.log(randomInteger(0, 0)); // 0
console.log(randomInteger(0, 0xFFFFFFFF)); // 944450079
console.log(randomInteger(-1, 0xFFFFFFFF));
// Error: Range of 4294967296 covering -1 to 4294967295 is > 4294967295.
console.log(new Array(12).fill().map(n => randomInteger(8, 12)));
// [11, 8, 8, 11, 10, 8, 8, 12, 12, 12, 9, 9]
to return 1-6 like a dice basically,
return Math.round(Math.random() * 5 + 1);
Adding float with fixed precision version based on the int version in #Francisc's answer:
function randomFloatFromInterval (min, max, fractionDigits) {
const fractionMultiplier = Math.pow(10, fractionDigits)
return Math.round(
(Math.random() * (max - min) + min) * fractionMultiplier,
) / fractionMultiplier
}
so:
randomFloatFromInterval(1,3,4) // => 2.2679, 1.509, 1.8863, 2.9741, ...
and for int answer
randomFloatFromInterval(1,3,0) // => 1, 2, 3
Crypto-strong random integer number in range [a,b] (assumption: a < b )
let rand= (a,b)=> a+(b-a+1)*crypto.getRandomValues(new Uint32Array(1))[0]/2**32|0
console.log( rand(1,6) );
This function can generate a random integer number between (and including) min and max numbers:
function randomNumber(min, max) {
if (min > max) {
let temp = max;
max = min;
min = temp;
}
if (min <= 0) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max + Math.abs(min) + 1)) + min;
} else {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
}
Example:
randomNumber(-2, 3); // can be -2, -1, 0, 1, 2 and 3
randomNumber(-5, -2); // can be -5, -4, -3 and -2
randomNumber(0, 4); // can be 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4
randomNumber(4, 0); // can be 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4
Using random function, which can be reused.
function randomNum(min, max) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
randomNum(1, 6);
This should work:
const getRandomNum = (min, max) => Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min
If the starting number is 1, as in your example (1-6), you can use Math.ceil() method instead of Math.floor().
Math.ceil(Math.random() * 6)
instead of
Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1
Let's not forget other useful Math methods.
This is about nine years late, but randojs.com makes this a simple one-liner:
rando(1, 6)
You just need to add this to the head of your html document, and you can do pretty much whatever you want with randomness easily. Random values from arrays, random jquery elements, random properties from objects, and even preventing repetitions if needed.
<script src="https://randojs.com/1.0.0.js"></script>
Try using:
function random(min, max) {
return Math.round((Math.random() *( Math.abs(max - min))) + min);
}
console.log(random(1, 6));
Short Answer: It's achievable using a simple array.
you can alternate within array elements.
This solution works even if your values are not consecutive. Values don't even have to be a number.
let array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
const randomValue = array[Math.floor(Math.random() * array.length)];
This simple function is handy and works in ANY cases (fully tested).
Also, the distribution of the results has been fully tested and is 100% correct.
function randomInteger(pMin = 1, pMax = 1_000_000_000)
//Author: Axel Gauffre.
//Here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/74636954/5171000
//Inspired by: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Math/random#getting_a_random_number_between_two_values
//
//This function RETURNS A RANDOM INTEGER between pMin (INCLUDED) and pMax (INCLUDED).
// - pMin and pMax should be integers.
// - HOWEVER, if pMin and/or pMax are FLOATS, they will be ROUNDED to the NEAREST integer.
// - NEGATIVE values ARE supported.
// - The ORDER of the 2 arguments has NO consequence: If pMin > pMax, then pMin and pMax will simply be SWAPPED.
// - If pMin is omitted, it will DEFAULT TO 1.
// - If pMax is omitted, it will DEFAULT TO 1 BILLION.
//
//This function works in ANY cases (fully tested).
//Also, the distribution of the results has been fully tested and is 100% correct.
{
pMin = Math.round(pMin);
pMax = Math.round(pMax);
if (pMax < pMin) { let t = pMin; pMin = pMax; pMax = t;}
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (pMax+1 - pMin) + pMin);
}
I discovered a great new way to do this using ES6 default parameters. It is very nifty since it allows either one argument or two arguments. Here it is:
function random(n, b = 0) {
return Math.random() * (b-n) + n;
}
This works for me and produces values like Python's random.randint standard library function:
function randint(min, max) {
return Math.round((Math.random() * Math.abs(max - min)) + min);
}
console.log("Random integer: " + randint(-5, 5));
Just started learning loops and I'm having trouble understanding the order of operation here in the let value, along with how the random() works in this scenario.
From what it looks like: Math.floor() prevents decimals and Math.random() selects a random number between 0 and 36. Does random() select a random value for both MAX and MIN? Does random() also generate a random for its self to be multiplied by whatever the value of MAX and MIN equal after being subtracted, then adding the MIN back?
const MIN = 0;
const MAX = 36;
var testNumber = 15;
var i = 1;
while (MAX) {
let randomValue = Math.floor(Math.random() * (MAX - MIN)) + MIN;
if (randomValue == testNumber) {
break;
}
Math.random() provides a random floating point number between 0 and 1. If you want to get a wider range of random values, you multiply by the magnitude of the range you want (i.e. MAX - MIN). Then, if MIN is great than 0 you'll need to add it to the resulting random number, otherwise the results range would be 0 up to (MAX - MIN).
As you say, Math.floor() simply rounds the result down to the nearest integer.
The Math.floor() function returns the largest integer less than or equal to a given number. This is in contrast to the Math.ceil() function that returns the largest integer more than or equal to a given number.
The Math.random() function returns a floating-point, pseudo-random number in the range 0 to less than 1 (inclusive of 0, but not 1) with an approximately uniform distribution over that range — which you can then scale to your desired range.
So in the case of your randomValue variable, a pseudo-random value between the values for MIN and MAX is generated. This value could have decimals because of how Math.random() operates thus Math.floor is used to get a whole number. MIN is added to the end so that the random value will always fall within the range, especially if MIN is not 0.
Math.floor() rounds the decimal to "A number representing the largest integer less than or equal to the specified number." So Math.floor(45.03) will be 45 and Math.floor(-34.23) will be 35.
And Math.random generates a (decimal, or whole) number between 0, inclusive and 1 exclusive.
I just learned this:
Math.floor(Math.random()*(max-min+1)+min);
This will generate a random whole number between max and min inclusive. I can figure out mathematically why it works. Just wondering.
Lets call Math.random(), R; max M;min m. If you just look at the inside:
R*(M-m+1)+m //or RM-Rm+R+m,
It's obvious the quantity is at least as big as m. But why is it no bigger than M? I assume this works with negative M and m, as well.
Lets assume r is Math.random() which is a number between 0, inclusive and 1 exclusive; which we show it as:
// Let r is shortcut for Math.random()
r => [0 to 1} // lets [] symbols for inclusive and {} symbols for exclusive
to get a number in a larger scale, we can multiply it with N:
//scale by N:
r * N => [0 to N}
to include N in our range, we can use one number greater than N and round the result:
r * (N+1) => [ 0 to (N+1) }
floor(r * (N+1)) => [ 0 to N ] // decimals after N will be removed
So up to now, we reach a good formula: to have a random number between 0 and N (both inclusive), we should use: floor(r * (N+1))
if we shift the equation to start from a min value:
//add `min` to equation:
floor(r * (N+1)) + min => [ min to N+min ]
it is almost finished: consider N+min as max, we have:
N+min = max => N = max-min
replace it in our equation:
floor(r * (max-min+1)) + min => [ min to max ]
Note: It is obvious that we can move the min inside the floor function as it is an integer value and does not have any decimal digits. so we could write it also as:
floor( r * (max-min+1) + min )
It's pretty easy, but you need to write it down a little wordy:
var min = 10;
var max = 20;
var difference = max - min; // 10
var random = Math.random() // (0...1)
var randomDifference = random * difference; // (0...difference)
var withMinOffset = randomDifference + min; // (10...20)
The above withMinOffset is the random value between min and max. The reason this works is because you know the number cannot be lower than min, so we will always have to add the min to the randomised number. Then we know we want a range, so we can use max - min to get the maximum amount of randomness we can get.
The number will never be bigger than M simply because difference + min === max, which is the upper limit. Multiplying say, 10, by a random number between 0 and 1 will always generate a number between 0 and 10. Adding the min to it will always have a number between min and min + difference.
If num parameter is 52, how many possible return values are there? is it 52 or 53? If I understand this correctly, Math.random uses random values from 0 to 1 inclusive. If so, then 0 is a possible return value and so is 52. This results in 53 possible return values. Is this correct? Reason I ask is that a book that I'm learning from uses this code for a deck of cards. I wonder if num should equal 51 ?
Thanks ...
function getRandom(num) {
var my_num = Math.floor(Math.random * num);
return my_num;
};
Math.floor(Math.random() * num) // note random() is a function.
This will return all integers from 0 (including 0) to num (NOT including num).
Math.random returns a number between 0 (inclusive) and 1 (exclusive). Multiplying the result by X gives you between 0 (inclusive) and X (exclusive). Adding or subtracting X shifts the range by +-X.
Here's some handy functions from MDN:
// Returns a random number between 0 (inclusive) and 1 (exclusive)
function getRandom() {
return Math.random();
}
// Returns a random number between min and max
function getRandomArbitrary(min, max) {
return Math.random() * (max - min) + min;
}
// Returns a random integer between min and max
// Using Math.round() will give you a non-uniform distribution!
function getRandomInt(min, max) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
Since Math.random returns a real number between [0,1) (1 is not inclusive), multiplying the result returns a real number between [0, 52).
Since you are flooring the result, the maximum number returned is 51 and there are 52 distinct values (counting 0).
Since value of Math.random varies from 0 to 1(exclusive);
so if you pass 52 in getRandom, return value will vary from 0 to 52(exclusive). so getRandom can return only 52 values. as you are using Math.floor. the max value can be returned is 51.
Is there a way to generate a random number in a specified range with JavaScript ?
For example: a specified range from 1 to 6 were the random number could be either 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6.
function randomIntFromInterval(min, max) { // min and max included
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1) + min)
}
const rndInt = randomIntFromInterval(1, 6)
console.log(rndInt)
What it does "extra" is it allows random intervals that do not start with 1.
So you can get a random number from 10 to 15 for example. Flexibility.
Important
The following code works only if the minimum value is `1`. It does not work for minimum values other than `1`.
If you wanted to get a random integer between 1 (and only 1) and 6, you would calculate:
const rndInt = Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1
console.log(rndInt)
Where:
1 is the start number
6 is the number of possible results (1 + start (6) - end (1))
Math.random()
Returns an integer random number between min (included) and max (included):
function randomInteger(min, max) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
Or any random number between min (included) and max (not included):
function randomNumber(min, max) {
return Math.random() * (max - min) + min;
}
Useful examples (integers):
// 0 -> 10
Math.floor(Math.random() * 11);
// 1 -> 10
Math.floor(Math.random() * 10) + 1;
// 5 -> 20
Math.floor(Math.random() * 16) + 5;
// -10 -> (-2)
Math.floor(Math.random() * 9) - 10;
** And always nice to be reminded (Mozilla):
Math.random() does not provide cryptographically secure random
numbers. Do not use them for anything related to security. Use the Web
Crypto API instead, and more precisely the
window.crypto.getRandomValues() method.
Other solutions:
(Math.random() * 6 | 0) + 1
~~(Math.random() * 6) + 1
Try online
TL;DR
function generateRandomInteger(min, max) {
return Math.floor(min + Math.random()*(max - min + 1))
}
To get the random number
generateRandomInteger(-20, 20);
EXPLANATION BELOW
integer - A number which is not a fraction; a whole number
We need to get a random number , say X between min and max.
X, min and max are all integers
i.e
min <= X <= max
If we subtract min from the equation, this is equivalent to
0 <= (X - min) <= (max - min)
Now, lets multiply this with a random number r
which is
0 <= (X - min) * r <= (max - min) * r
Now, lets add back min to the equation
min <= min + (X - min) * r <= min + (max - min) * r
For, any given X, the above equation satisfies only when r has range of [0,1] For any other values of r the above equation is unsatisfied.
Learn more about ranges [x,y] or (x,y) here
Our next step is to find a function which always results in a value which has a range of [0,1]
Now, the range of r i.e [0,1] is very similar to Math.random() function in Javascript. Isn't it?
The Math.random() function returns a floating-point, pseudo-random
number in the range [0, 1); that is, from 0 (inclusive) up to but not
including 1 (exclusive)
Random Function using Math.random() 0 <= r < 1
Notice that in Math.random() left bound is inclusive and the right bound is exclusive. This means min + (max - min) * r will evaluate to having a range from [min, max)
To include our right bound i.e [min,max] we increase the right bound by 1 and floor the result.
function generateRandomInteger(min, max) {
return Math.floor(min + Math.random()*(max - min + 1))
}
To get the random number
generateRandomInteger(-20, 20);
Or, in Underscore
_.random(min, max)
var x = 6; // can be any number
var rand = Math.floor(Math.random()*x) + 1;
jsfiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/cyGwf/477/
Random Integer: to get a random integer between min and max, use the following code
function getRandomInteger(min, max) {
min = Math.ceil(min);
max = Math.floor(max);
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min)) + min;
}
Random Floating Point Number: to get a random floating point number between min and max, use the following code
function getRandomFloat(min, max) {
return Math.random() * (max - min) + min;
}
Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Math/random
Math is not my strong point, but I've been working on a project where I needed to generate a lot of random numbers between both positive and negative.
function randomBetween(min, max) {
if (min < 0) {
return min + Math.random() * (Math.abs(min)+max);
}else {
return min + Math.random() * max;
}
}
E.g
randomBetween(-10,15)//or..
randomBetween(10,20)//or...
randomBetween(-200,-100)
Of course, you can also add some validation to make sure you don't do this with anything other than numbers. Also make sure that min is always less than or equal to max.
Get a random integer between 0 and 400
let rand = Math.round(Math.random() * 400)
document.write(rand)
Get a random integer between 200 and 1500
let range = {min: 200, max: 1500}
let delta = range.max - range.min
const rand = Math.round(range.min + Math.random() * delta)
document.write(rand)
Using functions
function randBetween(min, max){
let delta = max - min
return Math.round(min + Math.random() * delta)
}
document.write(randBetween(10, 15));
// JavaScript ES6 arrow function
const randBetween = (min, max) => {
let delta = max - min
return Math.round(min + Math.random() * delta)
}
document.write(randBetween(10, 20))
I wrote more flexible function which can give you random number but not only integer.
function rand(min,max,interval)
{
if (typeof(interval)==='undefined') interval = 1;
var r = Math.floor(Math.random()*(max-min+interval)/interval);
return r*interval+min;
}
var a = rand(0,10); //can be 0, 1, 2 (...) 9, 10
var b = rand(4,6,0.1); //can be 4.0, 4.1, 4.2 (...) 5.9, 6.0
Fixed version.
ES6 / Arrow functions version based on Francis' code (i.e. the top answer):
const randomIntFromInterval = (min, max) => Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1) + min);
Example
Return a random number between 1 and 10:
Math.floor((Math.random() * 10) + 1);
The result could be:
3
Try yourself: here
--
or using lodash / undescore:
_.random(min, max)
Docs:
- lodash
- undescore
The top rated solution is not mathematically correct as same as comments under it -> Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1.
Task: generate random number between 1 and 6.
Math.random() returns floating point number between 0 and 1 (like 0.344717274374 or 0.99341293123 for example), which we will use as a percentage, so Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1 returns some percentage of 6 (max: 5, min: 0) and adds 1. The author got lucky that lower bound was 1., because percentage floor will "maximumly" return 5 which is less than 6 by 1, and that 1 will be added by lower bound 1.
The problems occurs when lower bound is greater than 1. For instance,
Task: generate random between 2 and 6.
(following author's logic)
Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 2, it is obviously seen that if we get 5 here -> Math.random() * 6 and then add 2, the outcome will be 7 which goes beyond the desired boundary of 6.
Another example,
Task: generate random between 10 and 12.
(following author's logic)
Math.floor(Math.random() * 12) + 10, (sorry for repeating) it is obvious that we are getting 0%-99% percent of number "12", which will go way beyond desired boundary of 12.
So, the correct logic is to take the difference between lower bound and upper bound add 1, and only then floor it (to substract 1, because Math.random() returns 0 - 0.99, so no way to get full upper bound, thats why we adding 1 to upper bound to get maximumly 99% of (upper bound + 1) and then we floor it to get rid of excess). Once we got the floored percentage of (difference + 1), we can add lower boundary to get the desired randomed number between 2 numbers.
The logic formula for that will be: Math.floor(Math.random() * ((up_boundary - low_boundary) + 1)) + 10.
P.s.: Even comments under the top-rated answer were incorrect, since people forgot to add 1 to the difference, meaning that they will never get the up boundary (yes it might be a case if they dont want to get it at all, but the requirenment was to include the upper boundary).
I was searching random number generator written in TypeScript and I have written this after reading all of the answers, hope It would work for TypeScript coders.
Rand(min: number, max: number): number {
return (Math.random() * (max - min + 1) | 0) + min;
}
Inspite of many answers and almost same result. I would like to add my answer and explain its working. Because it is important to understand its working rather than copy pasting one line code. Generating random numbers is nothing but simple maths.
CODE:
function getR(lower, upper) {
var percent = (Math.random() * 100);
// this will return number between 0-99 because Math.random returns decimal number from 0-0.9929292 something like that
//now you have a percentage, use it find out the number between your INTERVAL :upper-lower
var num = ((percent * (upper - lower) / 100));
//num will now have a number that falls in your INTERVAL simple maths
num += lower;
//add lower to make it fall in your INTERVAL
//but num is still in decimal
//use Math.floor>downward to its nearest integer you won't get upper value ever
//use Math.ceil>upward to its nearest integer upper value is possible
//Math.round>to its nearest integer 2.4>2 2.5>3 both lower and upper value possible
console.log(Math.floor(num), Math.ceil(num), Math.round(num));
}
Math.random() is fast and suitable for many purposes, but it's not appropriate if you need cryptographically-secure values (it's not secure), or if you need integers from a completely uniform unbiased distribution (the multiplication approach used in others answers produces certain values slightly more often than others).
In such cases, we can use crypto.getRandomValues() to generate secure integers, and reject any generated values that we can't map uniformly into the target range. This will be slower, but it shouldn't be significant unless you're generating extremely large numbers of values.
To clarify the biased distribution concern, consider the case where we want to generate a value between 1 and 5, but we have a random number generator that produces values between 1 and 16 (a 4-bit value). We want to have the same number of generated values mapping to each output value, but 16 does not evenly divide by 5: it leaves a remainder of 1. So we need to reject 1 of the possible generated values, and only continue when we get one of the 15 lesser values that can be uniformly mapped into our target range. Our behaviour could look like this pseudocode:
Generate a 4-bit integer in the range 1-16.
If we generated 1, 6, or 11 then output 1.
If we generated 2, 7, or 12 then output 2.
If we generated 3, 8, or 13 then output 3.
If we generated 4, 9, or 14 then output 4.
If we generated 5, 10, or 15 then output 5.
If we generated 16 then reject it and try again.
The following code uses similar logic, but generates a 32-bit integer instead, because that's the largest common integer size that can be represented by JavaScript's standard number type. (This could be modified to use BigInts if you need a larger range.) Regardless of the chosen range, the fraction of generated values that are rejected will always be less than 0.5, so the expected number of rejections will always be less than 1.0 and usually close to 0.0; you don't need to worry about it looping forever.
const randomInteger = (min, max) => {
const range = max - min;
const maxGeneratedValue = 0xFFFFFFFF;
const possibleResultValues = range + 1;
const possibleGeneratedValues = maxGeneratedValue + 1;
const remainder = possibleGeneratedValues % possibleResultValues;
const maxUnbiased = maxGeneratedValue - remainder;
if (!Number.isInteger(min) || !Number.isInteger(max) ||
max > Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER || min < Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER) {
throw new Error('Arguments must be safe integers.');
} else if (range > maxGeneratedValue) {
throw new Error(`Range of ${range} (from ${min} to ${max}) > ${maxGeneratedValue}.`);
} else if (max < min) {
throw new Error(`max (${max}) must be >= min (${min}).`);
} else if (min === max) {
return min;
}
let generated;
do {
generated = crypto.getRandomValues(new Uint32Array(1))[0];
} while (generated > maxUnbiased);
return min + (generated % possibleResultValues);
};
console.log(randomInteger(-8, 8)); // -2
console.log(randomInteger(0, 0)); // 0
console.log(randomInteger(0, 0xFFFFFFFF)); // 944450079
console.log(randomInteger(-1, 0xFFFFFFFF));
// Error: Range of 4294967296 covering -1 to 4294967295 is > 4294967295.
console.log(new Array(12).fill().map(n => randomInteger(8, 12)));
// [11, 8, 8, 11, 10, 8, 8, 12, 12, 12, 9, 9]
to return 1-6 like a dice basically,
return Math.round(Math.random() * 5 + 1);
Adding float with fixed precision version based on the int version in #Francisc's answer:
function randomFloatFromInterval (min, max, fractionDigits) {
const fractionMultiplier = Math.pow(10, fractionDigits)
return Math.round(
(Math.random() * (max - min) + min) * fractionMultiplier,
) / fractionMultiplier
}
so:
randomFloatFromInterval(1,3,4) // => 2.2679, 1.509, 1.8863, 2.9741, ...
and for int answer
randomFloatFromInterval(1,3,0) // => 1, 2, 3
Crypto-strong random integer number in range [a,b] (assumption: a < b )
let rand= (a,b)=> a+(b-a+1)*crypto.getRandomValues(new Uint32Array(1))[0]/2**32|0
console.log( rand(1,6) );
This function can generate a random integer number between (and including) min and max numbers:
function randomNumber(min, max) {
if (min > max) {
let temp = max;
max = min;
min = temp;
}
if (min <= 0) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max + Math.abs(min) + 1)) + min;
} else {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
}
Example:
randomNumber(-2, 3); // can be -2, -1, 0, 1, 2 and 3
randomNumber(-5, -2); // can be -5, -4, -3 and -2
randomNumber(0, 4); // can be 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4
randomNumber(4, 0); // can be 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4
Using random function, which can be reused.
function randomNum(min, max) {
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min;
}
randomNum(1, 6);
This should work:
const getRandomNum = (min, max) => Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min + 1)) + min
If the starting number is 1, as in your example (1-6), you can use Math.ceil() method instead of Math.floor().
Math.ceil(Math.random() * 6)
instead of
Math.floor(Math.random() * 6) + 1
Let's not forget other useful Math methods.
This is about nine years late, but randojs.com makes this a simple one-liner:
rando(1, 6)
You just need to add this to the head of your html document, and you can do pretty much whatever you want with randomness easily. Random values from arrays, random jquery elements, random properties from objects, and even preventing repetitions if needed.
<script src="https://randojs.com/1.0.0.js"></script>
Try using:
function random(min, max) {
return Math.round((Math.random() *( Math.abs(max - min))) + min);
}
console.log(random(1, 6));
Short Answer: It's achievable using a simple array.
you can alternate within array elements.
This solution works even if your values are not consecutive. Values don't even have to be a number.
let array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
const randomValue = array[Math.floor(Math.random() * array.length)];
This simple function is handy and works in ANY cases (fully tested).
Also, the distribution of the results has been fully tested and is 100% correct.
function randomInteger(pMin = 1, pMax = 1_000_000_000)
//Author: Axel Gauffre.
//Here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/74636954/5171000
//Inspired by: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Math/random#getting_a_random_number_between_two_values
//
//This function RETURNS A RANDOM INTEGER between pMin (INCLUDED) and pMax (INCLUDED).
// - pMin and pMax should be integers.
// - HOWEVER, if pMin and/or pMax are FLOATS, they will be ROUNDED to the NEAREST integer.
// - NEGATIVE values ARE supported.
// - The ORDER of the 2 arguments has NO consequence: If pMin > pMax, then pMin and pMax will simply be SWAPPED.
// - If pMin is omitted, it will DEFAULT TO 1.
// - If pMax is omitted, it will DEFAULT TO 1 BILLION.
//
//This function works in ANY cases (fully tested).
//Also, the distribution of the results has been fully tested and is 100% correct.
{
pMin = Math.round(pMin);
pMax = Math.round(pMax);
if (pMax < pMin) { let t = pMin; pMin = pMax; pMax = t;}
return Math.floor(Math.random() * (pMax+1 - pMin) + pMin);
}
I discovered a great new way to do this using ES6 default parameters. It is very nifty since it allows either one argument or two arguments. Here it is:
function random(n, b = 0) {
return Math.random() * (b-n) + n;
}
This works for me and produces values like Python's random.randint standard library function:
function randint(min, max) {
return Math.round((Math.random() * Math.abs(max - min)) + min);
}
console.log("Random integer: " + randint(-5, 5));