Best way to randomize an array with .NET

C#.NetAlgorithmSortingRandom

C# Problem Overview


What is the best way to randomize an array of strings with .NET? My array contains about 500 strings and I'd like to create a new Array with the same strings but in a random order.

Please include a C# example in your answer.

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

The following implementation uses the Fisher-Yates algorithm AKA the Knuth Shuffle. It runs in O(n) time and shuffles in place, so is better performing than the 'sort by random' technique, although it is more lines of code. See here for some comparative performance measurements. I have used System.Random, which is fine for non-cryptographic purposes.*

static class RandomExtensions
{
    public static void Shuffle<T> (this Random rng, T[] array)
    {
        int n = array.Length;
        while (n > 1) 
        {
            int k = rng.Next(n--);
            T temp = array[n];
            array[n] = array[k];
            array[k] = temp;
        }
    }
}

Usage:

var array = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4};
var rng = new Random();
rng.Shuffle(array);
rng.Shuffle(array); // different order from first call to Shuffle

* For longer arrays, in order to make the (extremely large) number of permutations equally probable it would be necessary to run a pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) through many iterations for each swap to produce enough entropy. For a 500-element array only a very small fraction of the possible 500! permutations will be possible to obtain using a PRNG. Nevertheless, the Fisher-Yates algorithm is unbiased and therefore the shuffle will be as good as the RNG you use.

Solution 2 - C#

If you're on .NET 3.5, you can use the following IEnumerable coolness:

Random rnd=new Random();
string[] MyRandomArray = MyArray.OrderBy(x => rnd.Next()).ToArray();    

Edit: and here's the corresponding VB.NET code:

Dim rnd As New System.Random
Dim MyRandomArray = MyArray.OrderBy(Function() rnd.Next()).ToArray()

Second edit, in response to remarks that System.Random "isn't threadsafe" and "only suitable for toy apps" due to returning a time-based sequence: as used in my example, Random() is perfectly thread-safe, unless you're allowing the routine in which you randomize the array to be re-entered, in which case you'll need something like lock (MyRandomArray) anyway in order not to corrupt your data, which will protect rnd as well.

Also, it should be well-understood that System.Random as a source of entropy isn't very strong. As noted in the MSDN documentation, you should use something derived from System.Security.Cryptography.RandomNumberGenerator if you're doing anything security-related. For example:

using System.Security.Cryptography;

...

RNGCryptoServiceProvider rnd = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider();
string[] MyRandomArray = MyArray.OrderBy(x => GetNextInt32(rnd)).ToArray();

...

static int GetNextInt32(RNGCryptoServiceProvider rnd)
    {
        byte[] randomInt = new byte[4];
        rnd.GetBytes(randomInt);
        return Convert.ToInt32(randomInt[0]);
    }

Solution 3 - C#

You're looking for a shuffling algorithm, right?

Okay, there are two ways to do this: the clever-but-people-always-seem-to-misunderstand-it-and-get-it-wrong-so-maybe-its-not-that-clever-after-all way, and the dumb-as-rocks-but-who-cares-because-it-works way.

Dumb way

> * Create a duplicate of your first array, but tag each string should with a random number. > * Sort the duplicate array with respect to the random number.

This algorithm works well, but make sure that your random number generator is unlikely to tag two strings with the same number. Because of the so-called Birthday Paradox, this happens more often than you might expect. Its time complexity is O(n log n).

Clever way

I'll describe this as a recursive algorithm:

> To shuffle an array of size n (indices in the range [0..n-1]): > > #### if n = 0 > > * do nothing > > #### if n > 0 > > * (recursive step) shuffle the first n-1 elements of the array > * choose a random index, x, in the range [0..n-1] > * swap the element at index n-1 with the element at index x

The iterative equivalent is to walk an iterator through the array, swapping with random elements as you go along, but notice that you cannot swap with an element after the one that the iterator points to. This is a very common mistake, and leads to a biased shuffle.

Time complexity is O(n).

Solution 4 - C#

This algorithm is simple but not efficient, O(N2). All the "order by" algorithms are typically O(N log N). It probably doesn't make a difference below hundreds of thousands of elements but it would for large lists.

var stringlist = ... // add your values to stringlist

var r = new Random();

var res = new List<string>(stringlist.Count);

while (stringlist.Count >0)
{
   var i = r.Next(stringlist.Count);
   res.Add(stringlist[i]);
   stringlist.RemoveAt(i);
}

The reason why it's O(N2) is subtle: List.RemoveAt() is a O(N) operation unless you remove in order from the end.

Solution 5 - C#

You can also make an extention method out of Matt Howells. Example.

   namespace System
    {
        public static class MSSystemExtenstions
        {
            private static Random rng = new Random();
            public static void Shuffle<T>(this T[] array)
            {
                rng = new Random();
                int n = array.Length;
                while (n > 1)
                {
                    int k = rng.Next(n);
                    n--;
                    T temp = array[n];
                    array[n] = array[k];
                    array[k] = temp;
                }
            }
        }
    }

Then you can just use it like:

        string[] names = new string[] {
                "Aaron Moline1", 
                "Aaron Moline2", 
                "Aaron Moline3", 
                "Aaron Moline4", 
                "Aaron Moline5", 
                "Aaron Moline6", 
                "Aaron Moline7", 
                "Aaron Moline8", 
                "Aaron Moline9", 
            };
        names.Shuffle<string>();

Solution 6 - C#

Just thinking off the top of my head, you could do this:

public string[] Randomize(string[] input)
{
  List<string> inputList = input.ToList();
  string[] output = new string[input.Length];
  Random randomizer = new Random();
  int i = 0;

  while (inputList.Count > 0)
  {
    int index = r.Next(inputList.Count);
    output[i++] = inputList[index];
    inputList.RemoveAt(index);
  }

  return (output);
}

Solution 7 - C#

Randomizing the array is intensive as you have to shift around a bunch of strings. Why not just randomly read from the array? In the worst case you could even create a wrapper class with a getNextString(). If you really do need to create a random array then you could do something like

for i = 0 -> i= array.length * 5
   swap two strings in random places

The *5 is arbitrary.

Solution 8 - C#

Generate an array of random floats or ints of the same length. Sort that array, and do corresponding swaps on your target array.

This yields a truly independent sort.

Solution 9 - C#

Ok, this is clearly a bump from my side (apologizes...), but I often use a quite general and cryptographically strong method.

public static class EnumerableExtensions
{
    static readonly RNGCryptoServiceProvider RngCryptoServiceProvider = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider();
    public static IEnumerable<T> Shuffle<T>(this IEnumerable<T> enumerable)
    {
        var randomIntegerBuffer = new byte[4];
        Func<int> rand = () =>
                             {
                                 RngCryptoServiceProvider.GetBytes(randomIntegerBuffer);
                                 return BitConverter.ToInt32(randomIntegerBuffer, 0);
                             };
        return from item in enumerable
               let rec = new {item, rnd = rand()}
               orderby rec.rnd
               select rec.item;
    }
}

Shuffle() is an extension on any IEnumerable so getting, say, numbers from 0 to 1000 in random order in a list can be done with

Enumerable.Range(0,1000).Shuffle().ToList()

This method also wont give any surprises when it comes to sorting, since the sort value is generated and remembered exactly once per element in the sequence.

Solution 10 - C#

 public static void Shuffle(object[] arr)
    {
        Random rand = new Random();
        for (int i = arr.Length - 1; i >= 1; i--)
        {
            int j = rand.Next(i + 1);
            object tmp = arr[j];
            arr[j] = arr[i];
            arr[i] = tmp;
        }
    }

Solution 11 - C#

Random r = new Random();
List<string> list = new List(originalArray);
List<string> randomStrings = new List();

while(list.Count > 0)
{
int i = r.Random(list.Count);
randomStrings.Add(list[i]);
list.RemoveAt(i);
}

Solution 12 - C#

Jacco, your solution ising a custom IComparer isn't safe. The Sort routines require the comparer to conform to several requirements in order to function properly. First among them is consistency. If the comparer is called on the same pair of objects, it must always return the same result. (the comparison must also be transitive).

Failure to meet these requirements can cause any number of problems in the sorting routine including the possibility of an infinite loop.

Regarding the solutions that associate a random numeric value with each entry and then sort by that value, these are lead to an inherent bias in the output because any time two entries are assigned the same numeric value, the randomness of the output will be compromised. (In a "stable" sort routine, whichever is first in the input will be first in the output. Array.Sort doesn't happen to be stable, but there is still a bias based on the partitioning done by the Quicksort algorithm).

You need to do some thinking about what level of randomness you require. If you are running a poker site where you need cryptographic levels of randomness to protect against a determined attacker you have very different requirements from someone who just wants to randomize a song playlist.

For song-list shuffling, there's no problem using a seeded PRNG (like System.Random). For a poker site, it's not even an option and you need to think about the problem a lot harder than anyone is going to do for you on stackoverflow. (using a cryptographic RNG is only the beginning, you need to ensure that your algorithm doesn't introduce a bias, that you have sufficient sources of entropy, and that you don't expose any internal state that would compromise subsequent randomness).

Solution 13 - C#

This post has already been pretty well answered - use a Durstenfeld implementation of the Fisher-Yates shuffle for a fast and unbiased result. There have even been some implementations posted, though I note some are actually incorrect.

I wrote a couple of posts a while back about implementing full and partial shuffles using this technique, and (this second link is where I'm hoping to add value) also a follow-up post about how to check whether your implementation is unbiased, which can be used to check any shuffle algorithm. You can see at the end of the second post the effect of a simple mistake in the random number selection can make.

Solution 14 - C#

You don't need complicated algorithms.

Just one simple line:

Random random = new Random();
array.ToList().Sort((x, y) => random.Next(-1, 1)).ToArray();

Note that we need to convert the Array to a List first, if you don't use List in the first place.

Also, mind that this is not efficient for very large arrays! Otherwise it's clean & simple.

Solution 15 - C#

This is a complete working Console solution based on the example provided in here:

class Program
{
    static string[] words1 = new string[] { "brown", "jumped", "the", "fox", "quick" };

    static void Main()
    {
        var result = Shuffle(words1);
        foreach (var i in result)
        {
            Console.Write(i + " ");
        }
        Console.ReadKey();
    }

   static string[] Shuffle(string[] wordArray) {
        Random random = new Random();
        for (int i = wordArray.Length - 1; i > 0; i--)
        {
            int swapIndex = random.Next(i + 1);
            string temp = wordArray[i];
            wordArray[i] = wordArray[swapIndex];
            wordArray[swapIndex] = temp;
        }
        return wordArray;
    }         
}

Solution 16 - C#

        int[] numbers = {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9};
        List<int> numList = new List<int>();
        numList.AddRange(numbers);

        Console.WriteLine("Original Order");
        for (int i = 0; i < numList.Count; i++)
        {
            Console.Write(String.Format("{0} ",numList[i]));
        }

        Random random = new Random();
        Console.WriteLine("\n\nRandom Order");
        for (int i = 0; i < numList.Capacity; i++)
        {
            int randomIndex = random.Next(numList.Count);
            Console.Write(String.Format("{0} ", numList[randomIndex]));
            numList.RemoveAt(randomIndex);
        }
        Console.ReadLine();

Solution 17 - C#

Could be:

Random random = new();

string RandomWord()
{
    const string CHARS = "abcdefghijklmnoprstuvwxyz";
    int n = random.Next(CHARS.Length);
    return string.Join("", CHARS.OrderBy(x => random.Next()).ToArray())[0..n];
}

Solution 18 - C#

Here's a simple way using OLINQ:

// Input array
List<String> lst = new List<string>();
for (int i = 0; i < 500; i += 1) lst.Add(i.ToString());

// Output array
List<String> lstRandom = new List<string>();

// Randomize
Random rnd = new Random();
lstRandom.AddRange(from s in lst orderby rnd.Next(100) select s);

Solution 19 - C#

private ArrayList ShuffleArrayList(ArrayList source)
{
    ArrayList sortedList = new ArrayList();
    Random generator = new Random();

    while (source.Count > 0)
    {
        int position = generator.Next(source.Count);
        sortedList.Add(source[position]);
        source.RemoveAt(position);
    }  
    return sortedList;
}

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMatsView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - C#Matt HowellsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#mdbView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#PitarouView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - C#SklivvzView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - C#AaronView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - C#TarsierView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - C#stimmsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - C#NickView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - C#jlarssonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - C#lev krinitskyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - C#nullDevView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 12 - C#AndrewView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 13 - C#Greg BeechView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 14 - C#bytecode77View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 15 - C#usefulBeeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 16 - C#Nitish KatareView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 17 - C#Sith2021View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 18 - C#Seth MorrisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 19 - C#Himalaya GargView Answer on Stackoverflow