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  2. List of emergency telephone numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emergency...

    106 – emergency number in Australia for textphone/TTY; 108 – emergency number in India (22 states) 110 – emergency number mainly in China, Japan, Taiwan; 111 – emergency number in New Zealand; 112 – emergency number across the European Union and on GSM mobile networks across the world; 119 – emergency number in Jamaica and parts of Asia

  3. Random seed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_seed

    A random seed (or seed state, or just seed) is a number (or vector) used to initialize a pseudorandom number generator.. A pseudorandom number generator's number sequence is completely determined by the seed: thus, if a pseudorandom number generator is later reinitialized with the same seed, it will produce the same sequence of numbers.

  4. Permuted congruential generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Permuted_Congruential_Generator

    A permuted congruential generator (PCG) is a pseudorandom number generation algorithm developed in 2014 by Dr. M.E. O'Neill which applies an output permutation function to improve the statistical properties of a modulo-2 n linear congruential generator.

  5. Multiply-with-carry pseudorandom number generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiply-with-carry...

    A linear congruential generator with base b = 2 32 is implemented as + = (+) , where c is a constant. If a ≡ 1 (mod 4) and c is odd, the resulting base-2 32 congruential sequence will have period 2 32.

  6. Telephone numbers in Slovakia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Slovakia

    The capital, Bratislava, has one-digit prefix and an 8-digit subscriber number. Following the break-up of Czechoslovakia in 1993, the successor states, the Czech Republic and Slovakia , continued to share the 42 country code, until 28 February 1997, when the Czech Republic adopted 420 while Slovakia adopted 421.

  7. Cryptographically secure pseudorandom number generator

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographically_secure...

    When the maximum number of bits output from this PRNG is equal to the 2 blocksize, the resulting output delivers the mathematically expected security level that the key size would be expected to generate, but the output is shown to not be indistinguishable from a true random number generator. [24] When the maximum number of bits output from ...