std::negative_binomial_distribution (3) Linux Manual Page
std::negative_binomial_distribution – std::negative_binomial_distribution
Synopsis
Defined in header<random>
template <class IntType = int>
(since C++ 11)
class negative_binomial_distribution;
Produces random non-negative integer values i, distributed according to discrete probability function:
\(P(i|k, p) = \binom{k + i - 1}{i} \cdot p^k \cdot (1 - p)^i\)P(i|k,p) =⎛
⎜
⎝k + i − 1
i⎞
⎟
⎠ · pk
· (1 − p)i
The value represents the number of failures in a series of independent yes/no trials (each succeeds with probability p), before exactly k successes occur.
std::negative_binomial_distribution satisfies RandomNumberDistribution
Template parameters
IntType – The result type generated by the generator. The effect is undefined if this is not one of short, int, long, long long, unsigned short, unsigned int, unsigned long, or unsigned long long.
Member types
Member type Definition
result_type IntType
param_type the type of the parameter set, see RandomNumberDistribution.
Member functions
constructor (public member function)
reset (public member function)
Generation
operator() (public member function)
Characteristics
p (public member function)
k
param (public member function)
min (public member function)
max (public member function)
Non-member functions
operator== (function)
operator!=
operator<< (function template)
operator>>
Example
// Run this code
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <string>
#include <map>
#include <random>
int main()
{
std::random_device rd;
std::mt19937 gen(rd());
// Pat goes door-to-door selling cookies
// At each house, there's a 75% chance that she sells one box
// how many times will she be turned away before selling 5 boxes?
std::negative_binomial_distribution<> d(5, 0.75);
std::map<int, int> hist;
for (int n = 0; n < 10000; ++n) {
++hist[d(gen)];
}
for (auto p : hist) {
std::cout << p.first << ' ' << std::string(p.second / 100, '*') << '\n';
}
}
Output:
External links
Weisstein,_Eric_W._"Negative_Binomial_Distribution." From MathWorld–A Wolfram Web Resource.
