Random sampling (numpy.random
)#
Quick start#
The numpy.random
module implements pseudo-random number generators
(PRNGs or RNGs, for short) with the ability to draw samples from a variety of
probability distributions. In general, users will create a Generator
instance
with default_rng
and call the various methods on it to obtain samples from
different distributions.
>>> import numpy as np
>>> rng = np.random.default_rng()
# Generate one random float uniformly distributed over the range [0, 1)
>>> rng.random()
0.06369197489564249 # may vary
# Generate an array of 10 numbers according to a unit Gaussian distribution
>>> rng.standard_normal(10)
array([-0.31018314, -1.8922078 , -0.3628523 , -0.63526532, 0.43181166, # may vary
0.51640373, 1.25693945, 0.07779185, 0.84090247, -2.13406828])
# Generate an array of 5 integers uniformly over the range [0, 10)
>>> rng.integers(low=0, high=10, size=5)
array([8, 7, 6, 2, 0]) # may vary
Our RNGs are deterministic sequences and can be reproduced by specifying a seed integer to
derive its initial state. By default, with no seed provided, default_rng
will
seed the RNG from nondeterministic data from the operating system and therefore
generate different numbers each time. The pseudo-random sequences will be
independent for all practical purposes, at least those purposes for which our
pseudo-randomness was good for in the first place.
>>> import numpy as np
>>> rng1 = np.random.default_rng()
>>> rng1.random()
0.6596288841243357 # may vary
>>> rng2 = np.random.default_rng()
>>> rng2.random()
0.11885628817151628 # may vary
Warning
The pseudo-random number generators implemented in this module are designed
for statistical modeling and simulation. They are not suitable for security
or cryptographic purposes. See the secrets
module from the
standard library for such use cases.
Seeds should be large positive integers. default_rng
can take positive
integers of any size. We recommend using very large, unique numbers to ensure
that your seed is different from anyone else’s. This is good practice to ensure
that your results are statistically independent from theirs unless you are
intentionally trying to reproduce their result. A convenient way to get
such a seed number is to use secrets.randbits
to get an
arbitrary 128-bit integer.
>>> import numpy as np
>>> import secrets
>>> import numpy as np
>>> secrets.randbits(128)
122807528840384100672342137672332424406 # may vary
>>> rng1 = np.random.default_rng(122807528840384100672342137672332424406)
>>> rng1.random()
0.5363922081269535
>>> rng2 = np.random.default_rng(122807528840384100672342137672332424406)
>>> rng2.random()
0.5363922081269535
See the documentation on default_rng
and SeedSequence
for more advanced
options for controlling the seed in specialized scenarios.
Generator
and its associated infrastructure was introduced in NumPy version
1.17.0. There is still a lot of code that uses the older RandomState
and the
functions in numpy.random
. While there are no plans to remove them at this
time, we do recommend transitioning to Generator
as you can. The algorithms
are faster, more flexible, and will receive more improvements in the future.
For the most part, Generator
can be used as a replacement for RandomState
.
See Legacy random generation for information on the legacy infrastructure,
What’s new or different for information on transitioning, and NEP 19 for some of the reasoning for the transition.
Design#
Users primarily interact with Generator
instances. Each Generator
instance
owns a BitGenerator
instance that implements the core RNG algorithm. The
BitGenerator
has a limited set of responsibilities. It manages state and
provides functions to produce random doubles and random unsigned 32- and 64-bit
values.
The Generator
takes the bit generator-provided stream and transforms them
into more useful distributions, e.g., simulated normal random values. This
structure allows alternative bit generators to be used with little code
duplication.
NumPy implements several different BitGenerator
classes implementing
different RNG algorithms. default_rng
currently uses PCG64
as the
default BitGenerator
. It has better statistical properties and performance
than the MT19937
algorithm used in the legacy RandomState
. See
Bit generators for more details on the supported BitGenerators.
default_rng
and BitGenerators delegate the conversion of seeds into RNG
states to SeedSequence
internally. SeedSequence
implements a sophisticated
algorithm that intermediates between the user’s input and the internal
implementation details of each BitGenerator
algorithm, each of which can
require different amounts of bits for its state. Importantly, it lets you use
arbitrary-sized integers and arbitrary sequences of such integers to mix
together into the RNG state. This is a useful primitive for constructing
a flexible pattern for parallel RNG streams.
For backward compatibility, we still maintain the legacy RandomState
class.
It continues to use the MT19937
algorithm by default, and old seeds continue
to reproduce the same results. The convenience Functions in numpy.random
are still aliases to the methods on a single global RandomState
instance. See
Legacy random generation for the complete details. See What’s new or different for
a detailed comparison between Generator
and RandomState
.
Parallel Generation#
The included generators can be used in parallel, distributed applications in a number of ways:
Users with a very large amount of parallelism will want to consult Upgrading PCG64 with PCG64DXSM.
Concepts#
Features#
Original Source of the Generator and BitGenerators#
This package was developed independently of NumPy and was integrated in version 1.17.0. The original repo is at bashtage/randomgen.