Jerry,
It's worse yet with ATP, because it uses its own rng. It is SO bad that I
would like to know the algorithm. I think I posted some VBA code a while
back to show how lousy it is; you can use it to generate 10000 values; then
sort them and do a frequency count. You'll find some mighty strange stuff;
quite a few numbers get repeated, and some values get repeated 7 or 8 times,
depending on the seed. Suggest to the good folks at MS to eviscerate the
thing, please.
Regards,
Dave B
"Jerry W. Lewis" <post_a_reply@no_e-mail.com> wrote in message
news:42EEE30E.2050301@no_e-mail.com...
> And similarly, you can use other INV functions with RAND() generate random
> numbers that follow other distributions. Unfortunately, Pre-2003 INV
> functions are too crude to do this well (which also means that ATP does it
> poorly).
>
> Jerry
>
> barrfly wrote:
>
>> unfortunately no. The rand() function only delivers a random number
>> that is uniformly distributed between 0 and 1. You can use the
>> norminv(rand()) function combination to create a normally distributed
>> random number with a mean and stdev of your choosing.
>
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