random k-sample of a file
Andrei Alexandrescu
SeeWebsiteForEmail at erdani.org
Thu Oct 9 13:33:11 PDT 2008
Kirk McDonald wrote:
> Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
>> I just ran across a nice little problem that I wanted to share as an
>> exercise for the interested in futile pastimes.
>>
>> The challenge, should you accept it, is to write a program that given
>> a number k and a file, outputs k lines picked uniformly at random from
>> the file. (If the file has less than k lines, it should all be
>> output.) The file's size is unbounded so loading it in memory is not
>> an option. How'd you go about it?
>>
>>
>> Andrei
>
> This is a classic interview question. The solution for k == 1 is easy:
>
> from random import randint
>
> chosen_line = None
>
> for i, line in enumerate(open('filename')):
> if randint(0, i) == 0:
> chosen_line = line
>
> print chosen_line
>
> (It is worth noting that randint() operates over an inclusive range.)
>
> If you do the math, this works out to a uniform distribution. For
> instance, say the file has three lines. Once we read in the third line,
> there is a 1 out of 3 chance that it will be picked as the chosen_line.
> Of the remaining 2 out of 3 chances, there is a 50% chance the second
> line will be chosen, and a 50% chance of the first line.
>
> Doing this for k > 1 becomes more complicated. We start by reading in
> the first k lines of the file. (And if we run out of lines before that,
> we're done.)
>
> import itertools
> from random import randint
>
> f = open('filename')
>
> k_lines = list(itertools.islice(f, k))
>
> # Next we just iterate over the rest of the file. If we have exhausted
> # the file, then the loop terminates immediately.
> for i, line in enumerate(f, start=k):
> if randint(0, i) == 0:
> k_lines[randint(0, k-1)] = line
>
> for line in k_lines:
> print line
>
> This is my first crack at a solution. I am not sure how close to a
> uniform distribution this works out to.
This looks good too, but I'm not sure where i will start from in the
loop. It should start at k + 1.
But where's the D code you guys? D is better than Python at scripting. Ahem.
Andrei
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