Mersenne Twister
The Mersenne Twister is a pseudorandom number generator that was developed in 1997 by Makoto Matsumoto and Takuji Nishimura. It provides for fast generation of very high quality random numbers - having been designed specifically to rectify many of the flaws found in older algorithms.
There are two variants of the algorithm, the newer and more commonly utilised one being the Mersenne Twister MT 19937. It has the following desirable properties:
The algorithm itself is a Twisted Generalised Shift Feedback Register[?] or TGSFR for short. The 'twist' is a transformation which assures equidistribution of the generated numbers in 623 dimensions (Linear Congruential Generators can at best manage reasonable distribution in 5 dimensions).
Unlike, for example, Blum Blum Shub, the algorithm in its native form is not suitable for cryptography. For many other applications, however, it is fast becoming the random number generator of choice.
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