This module implements pseudo-random number generators
for various distributions.
For integers, there is uniform selection from a range. For
sequences, there is uniform selection of a random element, a
function to generate a random permutation of a list in-place,
and a function for random sampling without replacement.
On the real line, there are functions to compute uniform,
normal (Gaussian), lognormal, negative exponential, gamma,
and beta distributions. For generating distributions of angles,
the von Mises distribution is available.
Almost all module functions depend on the basic
function random(), which generates a random float uniformly
in the semi-open range [0.0, 1.0). Python uses the Mersenne
Twister as the core generator. It produces 53-bit precision
floats and has a period of 2**19937-1. The underlying
implementation in C is both fast and threadsafe. The
Mersenne Twister is one of the most extensively tested
random number generators in existence. However, being
completely deterministic, it is not suitable for all purposes,
and is completely unsuitable for cryptographic purposes.
The functions supplied by this module are actually bound
methods of a hidden instance of the random.Random class.
You can instantiate your own instances of Random to get
generators that don’t share state.
Class Random can also be subclassed if you want to use a
different basic generator of your own devising: in that case,
override the random(), seed(), getstate(),
and setstate() methods. Optionally, a new generator can
supply a getrandbits() method — this
allows randrange() to produce selections over an arbitrarily
large range.
The random module also provides the SystemRandom class
which uses the system function os.urandom() to generate
random numbers from sources provided by the operating
system.
Warning The pseudo-random generators of this module
should not be used for security purposes. For security or
cryptographic uses, see the secrets module.
See also M. Matsumoto and T. Nishimura, “Mersenne Twister:
A 623-dimensionally equidistributed uniform pseudorandom
number generator”, ACM Transactions on Modeling and
Computer Simulation Vol. 8, No. 1, January pp.3–30 1998.
Complementary-Multiply-with-Carry recipe for a compatible
alternative random number generator with a long period and
comparatively simple update operations.
Bookkeeping functions
random.seed(a=None, version=2)
Initialize the random number generator.
If a is omitted or None, the current system time is used. If
randomness sources are provided by the operating system,
they are used instead of the system time (see
the os.urandom() function for details on availability).
If a is an int, it is used directly.
With version 2 (the default), a str, bytes,
or bytearray object gets converted to an int and all of its
bits are used.
With version 1 (provided for reproducing random sequences
from older versions of Python), the algorithm
for str and bytes generates a narrower range of seeds.
Changed in version 3.2: Moved to the version 2 scheme
which uses all of the bits in a string seed.
Deprecated since version 3.9: In the future, the seed must be
one of the following
types: NoneType, int, float, str, bytes, or bytearray.
random.getstate()
Return an object capturing the current internal state of the
generator. This object can be passed to setstate() to
restore the state.
random.setstate(state)
state should have been obtained from a previous call
to getstate(), and setstate() restores the internal state of
the generator to what it was at the time getstate() was
called.
Functions for bytes
random.randbytes(n)
Generate n random bytes.
This method should not be used for generating security
tokens. Use secrets.token_bytes() instead.
New in version 3.9.
Functions for integers
random.randrange(stop)
random.randrange(start, stop[, step])
Return a randomly selected element
from range(start, stop, step). This is equivalent
to choice(range(start, stop, step)), but doesn’t actually
build a range object.
The positional argument pattern matches that of range().
Keyword arguments should not be used because the function
may use them in unexpected ways.
Changed in version 3.2: randrange() is more sophisticated
about producing equally distributed values. Formerly it used
a style like int(random()*n) which could produce slightly
uneven distributions.
random.randint(a, b)
Return a random integer N such that a <= N <= b. Alias
for randrange(a, b+1).
random.getrandbits(k)
Returns a non-negative Python integer with k random bits.
This method is supplied with the MersenneTwister generator
and some other generators may also provide it as an optional
part of the API. When
available, getrandbits() enables randrange() to handle
arbitrarily large ranges.
Changed in version 3.9: This method now accepts zero for k.
Functions for sequences
random.choice(seq)
Return a random element from the non-empty sequence seq.
If seq is empty, raises IndexError.
random.choices(population, weights=None, *, cum_weig
hts=None, k=1)
Return a k sized list of elements chosen from
the population with replacement. If the population is empty,
raises IndexError.
If a weights sequence is specified, selections are made
according to the relative weights. Alternatively, if
a cum_weights sequence is given, the selections are made
according to the cumulative weights (perhaps computed
using itertools.accumulate()). For example, the relative
weights [10, 5, 30, 5] are equivalent to the cumulative
weights [10, 15, 45, 50]. Internally, the relative weights
are converted to cumulative weights before making
selections, so supplying the cumulative weights saves work.
If neither weights nor cum_weights are specified, selections
are made with equal probability. If a weights sequence is
supplied, it must be the same length as
the population sequence. It is a TypeError to specify
both weights and cum_weights.
The weights or cum_weights can use any numeric type that
interoperates with the float values returned
by random() (that includes integers, floats, and fractions but
excludes decimals). Behavior is undefined if any weight is
negative. A ValueError is raised if all weights are zero.
For a given seed, the choices() function with equal
weighting typically produces a different sequence than
repeated calls to choice(). The algorithm used
by choices() uses floating point arithmetic for internal
consistency and speed. The algorithm used
by choice() defaults to integer arithmetic with repeated
selections to avoid small biases from round-off error.
New in version 3.6.
Changed in version 3.9: Raises a ValueError if all weights
are zero.
random.shuffle(x[, random])
Shuffle the sequence x in place.
The optional argument random is a 0-argument function
returning a random float in [0.0, 1.0); by default, this is the
function random().
To shuffle an immutable sequence and return a new shuffled
list, use sample(x, k=len(x)) instead.
Note that even for small len(x), the total number of
permutations of x can quickly grow larger than the period of
most random number generators. This implies that most
permutations of a long sequence can never be generated. For
example, a sequence of length 2080 is the largest that can fit
within the period of the Mersenne Twister random number
generator.
Deprecated since version 3.9, will be removed in version
3.11: The optional parameter random.
random.sample(population, k, *, counts=None)
Return a k length list of unique elements chosen from the
population sequence or set. Used for random sampling
without replacement.
Returns a new list containing elements from the population
while leaving the original population unchanged. The
resulting list is in selection order so that all sub-slices will
also be valid random samples. This allows raffle winners (the
sample) to be partitioned into grand prize and second place
winners (the subslices).
Members of the population need not be hashable or unique.
If the population contains repeats, then each occurrence is a
possible selection in the sample.
Repeated elements can be specified one at a time or with the
optional keyword-only counts parameter. For
example, sample(['red', 'blue'], counts=[4, 2], k=5)
is equivalent
to sample(['red', 'red', 'red', 'red', 'blue', 'blue
'], k=5).
To choose a sample from a range of integers, use
a range() object as an argument. This is especially fast and
space efficient for sampling from a large
population: sample(range(10000000), k=60).
If the sample size is larger than the population size,
a ValueError is raised.
Changed in version 3.9: Added the counts parameter.
Deprecated since version 3.9: In the future,
the population must be a sequence. Instances of set are no
longer supported. The set must first be converted to
a list or tuple, preferably in a deterministic order so that
the sample is reproducible.
Real-valued distributions
The following functions generate specific real-valued
distributions. Function parameters are named after the
corresponding variables in the distribution’s equation, as
used in common mathematical practice; most of these
equations can be found in any statistics text.
random.random()
Return the next random floating point number in the range
[0.0, 1.0).
random.uniform(a, b)¶