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			2457 lines
		
	
	
		
			90 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| @node FFTW Reference, Multi-threaded FFTW, Other Important Topics, Top
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| @chapter FFTW Reference
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| 
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| This chapter provides a complete reference for all sequential (i.e.,
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| one-processor) FFTW functions.  Parallel transforms are described in
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| later chapters.
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| 
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| @menu
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| * Data Types and Files::
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| * Using Plans::
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| * Basic Interface::
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| * Advanced Interface::
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| * Guru Interface::
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| * New-array Execute Functions::
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| * Wisdom::
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| * What FFTW Really Computes::
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| @end menu
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| 
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| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
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| @node Data Types and Files, Using Plans, FFTW Reference, FFTW Reference
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| @section Data Types and Files
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| 
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| All programs using FFTW should include its header file:
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| 
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| @example
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| #include <fftw3.h>
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| @end example
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| 
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| You must also link to the FFTW library.  On Unix, this
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| means adding @code{-lfftw3 -lm} at the @emph{end} of the link command.
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| 
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| @menu
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| * Complex numbers::
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| * Precision::
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| * Memory Allocation::
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| @end menu
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| 
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| @c =========>
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| @node Complex numbers, Precision, Data Types and Files, Data Types and Files
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| @subsection Complex numbers
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| 
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| The default FFTW interface uses @code{double} precision for all
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| floating-point numbers, and defines a @code{fftw_complex} type to hold
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| complex numbers as:
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| 
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| @example
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| typedef double fftw_complex[2];
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| @end example
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| @tindex fftw_complex
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| 
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| Here, the @code{[0]} element holds the real part and the @code{[1]}
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| element holds the imaginary part.
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| 
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| Alternatively, if you have a C compiler (such as @code{gcc}) that
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| supports the C99 revision of the ANSI C standard, you can use C's new
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| native complex type (which is binary-compatible with the typedef above).
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| In particular, if you @code{#include <complex.h>} @emph{before}
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| @code{<fftw3.h>}, then @code{fftw_complex} is defined to be the native
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| complex type and you can manipulate it with ordinary arithmetic
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| (e.g. @code{x = y * (3+4*I)}, where @code{x} and @code{y} are
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| @code{fftw_complex} and @code{I} is the standard symbol for the
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| imaginary unit);
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| @cindex C99
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| 
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| 
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| C++ has its own @code{complex<T>} template class, defined in the
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| standard @code{<complex>} header file.  Reportedly, the C++ standards
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| committee has recently agreed to mandate that the storage format used
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| for this type be binary-compatible with the C99 type, i.e. an array
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| @code{T[2]} with consecutive real @code{[0]} and imaginary @code{[1]}
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| parts.  (See report
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| @uref{http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/WG21/docs/papers/2002/n1388.pdf
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| WG21/N1388}.)  Although not part of the official standard as of this
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| writing, the proposal stated that: ``This solution has been tested with
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| all current major implementations of the standard library and shown to
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| be working.''  To the extent that this is true, if you have a variable
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| @code{complex<double> *x}, you can pass it directly to FFTW via
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| @code{reinterpret_cast<fftw_complex*>(x)}.
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| @cindex C++
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| @cindex portability
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| 
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| @c =========>
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| @node Precision, Memory Allocation, Complex numbers, Data Types and Files
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| @subsection Precision
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| @cindex precision
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| 
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| You can install single and long-double precision versions of FFTW,
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| which replace @code{double} with @code{float} and @code{long double},
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| respectively (@pxref{Installation and Customization}).  To use these
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| interfaces, you:
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| 
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| @itemize @bullet
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| 
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| @item
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| Link to the single/long-double libraries; on Unix, @code{-lfftw3f} or
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| @code{-lfftw3l} instead of (or in addition to) @code{-lfftw3}.  (You
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| can link to the different-precision libraries simultaneously.)
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| 
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| @item
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| Include the @emph{same} @code{<fftw3.h>} header file.
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| 
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| @item
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| Replace all lowercase instances of @samp{fftw_} with @samp{fftwf_} or
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| @samp{fftwl_} for single or long-double precision, respectively.
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| (@code{fftw_complex} becomes @code{fftwf_complex}, @code{fftw_execute}
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| becomes @code{fftwf_execute}, etcetera.)
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| 
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| @item
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| Uppercase names, i.e. names beginning with @samp{FFTW_}, remain the
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| same.
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| 
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| @item
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| Replace @code{double} with @code{float} or @code{long double} for
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| subroutine parameters.
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| 
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| @end itemize
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| 
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| Depending upon your compiler and/or hardware, @code{long double} may not
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| be any more precise than @code{double} (or may not be supported at all,
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| although it is standard in C99).
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| @cindex C99
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| 
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| 
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| We also support using the nonstandard @code{__float128}
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| quadruple-precision type provided by recent versions of @code{gcc} on
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| 32- and 64-bit x86 hardware (@pxref{Installation and Customization}).
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| To use this type, link with @code{-lfftw3q -lquadmath -lm} (the
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| @code{libquadmath} library provided by @code{gcc} is needed for
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| quadruple-precision trigonometric functions) and use @samp{fftwq_}
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| identifiers.
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| 
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| @c =========>
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| @node Memory Allocation,  , Precision, Data Types and Files
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| @subsection Memory Allocation
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| 
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| @example
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| void *fftw_malloc(size_t n);
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| void fftw_free(void *p);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_malloc
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| @findex fftw_free
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| 
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| These are functions that behave identically to @code{malloc} and
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| @code{free}, except that they guarantee that the returned pointer obeys
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| any special alignment restrictions imposed by any algorithm in FFTW
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| (e.g. for SIMD acceleration).  @xref{SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc}.
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| @cindex alignment
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| 
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| 
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| Data allocated by @code{fftw_malloc} @emph{must} be deallocated by
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| @code{fftw_free} and not by the ordinary @code{free}.
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| 
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| These routines simply call through to your operating system's
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| @code{malloc} or, if necessary, its aligned equivalent
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| (e.g. @code{memalign}), so you normally need not worry about any
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| significant time or space overhead.  You are @emph{not required} to use
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| them to allocate your data, but we strongly recommend it.
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| 
 | |
| Note: in C++, just as with ordinary @code{malloc}, you must typecast
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| the output of @code{fftw_malloc} to whatever pointer type you are
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| allocating.
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| @cindex C++
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| 
 | |
| 
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| We also provide the following two convenience functions to allocate
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| real and complex arrays with @code{n} elements, which are equivalent
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| to @code{(double *) fftw_malloc(sizeof(double) * n)} and
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| @code{(fftw_complex *) fftw_malloc(sizeof(fftw_complex) * n)},
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| respectively:
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| 
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| @example
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| double *fftw_alloc_real(size_t n);
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| fftw_complex *fftw_alloc_complex(size_t n);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_alloc_real
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| @findex fftw_alloc_complex
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| 
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| The equivalent functions in other precisions allocate arrays of @code{n}
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| elements in that precision.  e.g. @code{fftwf_alloc_real(n)} is
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| equivalent to @code{(float *) fftwf_malloc(sizeof(float) * n)}.
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| @cindex precision
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| 
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| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
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| @node Using Plans, Basic Interface, Data Types and Files, FFTW Reference
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| @section Using Plans
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| 
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| Plans for all transform types in FFTW are stored as type
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| @code{fftw_plan} (an opaque pointer type), and are created by one of the
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| various planning routines described in the following sections.
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| @tindex fftw_plan
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| An @code{fftw_plan} contains all information necessary to compute the
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| transform, including the pointers to the input and output arrays.
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| 
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| @example
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| void fftw_execute(const fftw_plan plan);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_execute
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| 
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| This executes the @code{plan}, to compute the corresponding transform on
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| the arrays for which it was planned (which must still exist).  The plan
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| is not modified, and @code{fftw_execute} can be called as many times as
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| desired.
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| 
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| To apply a given plan to a different array, you can use the new-array execute
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| interface.  @xref{New-array Execute Functions}.
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| 
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| @code{fftw_execute} (and equivalents) is the only function in FFTW
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| guaranteed to be thread-safe; see @ref{Thread safety}.
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| 
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| This function:
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| @example
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| void fftw_destroy_plan(fftw_plan plan);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_destroy_plan
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| deallocates the @code{plan} and all its associated data.
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| 
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| FFTW's planner saves some other persistent data, such as the
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| accumulated wisdom and a list of algorithms available in the current
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| configuration.  If you want to deallocate all of that and reset FFTW
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| to the pristine state it was in when you started your program, you can
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| call:
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| 
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| @example
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| void fftw_cleanup(void);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_cleanup
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| 
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| After calling @code{fftw_cleanup}, all existing plans become undefined,
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| and you should not attempt to execute them nor to destroy them.  You can
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| however create and execute/destroy new plans, in which case FFTW starts
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| accumulating wisdom information again.
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| 
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| @code{fftw_cleanup} does not deallocate your plans, however.  To prevent
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| memory leaks, you must still call @code{fftw_destroy_plan} before
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| executing @code{fftw_cleanup}.
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| 
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| Occasionally, it may useful to know FFTW's internal ``cost'' metric
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| that it uses to compare plans to one another; this cost is
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| proportional to an execution time of the plan, in undocumented units,
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| if the plan was created with the @code{FFTW_MEASURE} or other
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| timing-based options, or alternatively is a heuristic cost function
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| for @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} plans.  (The cost values of measured and
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| estimated plans are not comparable, being in different units.  Also,
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| costs from different FFTW versions or the same version compiled
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| differently may not be in the same units.  Plans created from wisdom
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| have a cost of 0 since no timing measurement is performed for them.
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| Finally, certain problems for which only one top-level algorithm was
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| possible may have required no measurements of the cost of the whole
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| plan, in which case @code{fftw_cost} will also return 0.)  The cost
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| metric for a given plan is returned by:
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| 
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| @example
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| double fftw_cost(const fftw_plan plan);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_cost
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| 
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| The following two routines are provided purely for academic purposes
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| (that is, for entertainment).
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| 
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| @example
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| void fftw_flops(const fftw_plan plan, 
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|                 double *add, double *mul, double *fma);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_flops
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| 
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| Given a @code{plan}, set @code{add}, @code{mul}, and @code{fma} to an
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| exact count of the number of floating-point additions, multiplications,
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| and fused multiply-add operations involved in the plan's execution.  The
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| total number of floating-point operations (flops) is @code{add + mul +
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| 2*fma}, or @code{add + mul + fma} if the hardware supports fused
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| multiply-add instructions (although the number of FMA operations is only
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| approximate because of compiler voodoo).  (The number of operations
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| should be an integer, but we use @code{double} to avoid overflowing
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| @code{int} for large transforms; the arguments are of type @code{double}
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| even for single and long-double precision versions of FFTW.)
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| 
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| @example
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| void fftw_fprint_plan(const fftw_plan plan, FILE *output_file);
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| void fftw_print_plan(const fftw_plan plan);
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| char *fftw_sprint_plan(const fftw_plan plan);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_fprint_plan
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| @findex fftw_print_plan
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| 
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| This outputs a ``nerd-readable'' representation of the @code{plan} to
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| the given file, to @code{stdout}, or two a newly allocated
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| NUL-terminated string (which the caller is responsible for deallocating
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| with @code{free}), respectively.
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| 
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| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
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| @node Basic Interface, Advanced Interface, Using Plans, FFTW Reference
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| @section Basic Interface
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| @cindex basic interface
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| 
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| Recall that the FFTW API is divided into three parts@footnote{@i{Gallia est
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| omnis divisa in partes tres} (Julius Caesar).}: the @dfn{basic interface}
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| computes a single transform of contiguous data, the @dfn{advanced
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| interface} computes transforms of multiple or strided arrays, and the
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| @dfn{guru interface} supports the most general data layouts,
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| multiplicities, and strides.  This section describes the basic
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| interface, which we expect to satisfy the needs of most users.
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| 
 | |
| @menu
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| * Complex DFTs::
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| * Planner Flags::
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| * Real-data DFTs::
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| * Real-data DFT Array Format::
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| * Real-to-Real Transforms::
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| * Real-to-Real Transform Kinds::
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| @end menu
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| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Complex DFTs, Planner Flags, Basic Interface, Basic Interface
 | |
| @subsection Complex DFTs
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| 
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| @example
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| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_1d(int n0,
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|                            fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out,
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|                            int sign, unsigned flags);
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| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_2d(int n0, int n1,
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|                            fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out,
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|                            int sign, unsigned flags);
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| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_3d(int n0, int n1, int n2,
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|                            fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out,
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|                            int sign, unsigned flags);
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| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft(int rank, const int *n,
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|                         fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out,
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|                         int sign, unsigned flags);
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| @end example
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| @findex fftw_plan_dft_1d
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| @findex fftw_plan_dft_2d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_3d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft
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| 
 | |
| Plan a complex input/output discrete Fourier transform (DFT) in zero or
 | |
| more dimensions, returning an @code{fftw_plan} (@pxref{Using Plans}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Once you have created a plan for a certain transform type and
 | |
| parameters, then creating another plan of the same type and parameters,
 | |
| but for different arrays, is fast and shares constant data with the
 | |
| first plan (if it still exists).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The planner returns @code{NULL} if the plan cannot be created.  In the
 | |
| standard FFTW distribution, the basic interface is guaranteed to return
 | |
| a non-@code{NULL} plan.  A plan may be @code{NULL}, however, if you are
 | |
| using a customized FFTW configuration supporting a restricted set of
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| transforms.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Arguments
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{rank} is the rank of the transform (it should be the size of the
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| array @code{*n}), and can be any non-negative integer.  (@xref{Complex
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| Multi-Dimensional DFTs}, for the definition of ``rank''.)  The
 | |
| @samp{_1d}, @samp{_2d}, and @samp{_3d} planners correspond to a
 | |
| @code{rank} of @code{1}, @code{2}, and @code{3}, respectively.  The rank
 | |
| may be zero, which is equivalent to a rank-1 transform of size 1, i.e. a
 | |
| copy of one number from input to output.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{n0}, @code{n1}, @code{n2}, or @code{n[0..rank-1]} (as appropriate
 | |
| for each routine) specify the size of the transform dimensions.  They
 | |
| can be any positive integer.
 | |
|  
 | |
| @itemize @minus
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @cindex row-major
 | |
| Multi-dimensional arrays are stored in row-major order with dimensions:
 | |
| @code{n0} x @code{n1}; or @code{n0} x @code{n1} x @code{n2}; or
 | |
| @code{n[0]} x @code{n[1]} x ... x @code{n[rank-1]}.
 | |
| @xref{Multi-dimensional Array Format}.
 | |
| @item
 | |
| FFTW is best at handling sizes of the form
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @math{2^a 3^b 5^c 7^d 11^e 13^f},
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $2^a 3^b 5^c 7^d 11^e 13^f$,
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @html
 | |
| 2<sup>a</sup> 3<sup>b</sup> 5<sup>c</sup> 7<sup>d</sup>
 | |
|         11<sup>e</sup> 13<sup>f</sup>,
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| where @math{e+f} is either @math{0} or @math{1}, and the other exponents
 | |
| are arbitrary.  Other sizes are computed by means of a slow,
 | |
| general-purpose algorithm (which nevertheless retains @Onlogn{} performance even for prime sizes).  It is possible to customize FFTW
 | |
| for different array sizes; see @ref{Installation and Customization}.
 | |
| Transforms whose sizes are powers of @math{2} are especially fast.
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{in} and @code{out} point to the input and output arrays of the
 | |
| transform, which may be the same (yielding an in-place transform).
 | |
| @cindex in-place
 | |
| These arrays are overwritten during planning, unless
 | |
| @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} is used in the flags.  (The arrays need not be
 | |
| initialized, but they must be allocated.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If @code{in == out}, the transform is @dfn{in-place} and the input
 | |
| array is overwritten. If @code{in != out}, the two arrays must
 | |
| not overlap (but FFTW does not check for this condition).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_FORWARD
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_BACKWARD
 | |
| @code{sign} is the sign of the exponent in the formula that defines the
 | |
| Fourier transform.  It can be @math{-1} (= @code{FFTW_FORWARD}) or
 | |
| @math{+1} (= @code{FFTW_BACKWARD}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @cindex flags
 | |
| @code{flags} is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more planner flags,
 | |
| as defined in @ref{Planner Flags}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| FFTW computes an unnormalized transform: computing a forward followed by
 | |
| a backward transform (or vice versa) will result in the original data
 | |
| multiplied by the size of the transform (the product of the dimensions).
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| For more information, see @ref{What FFTW Really Computes}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Planner Flags, Real-data DFTs, Complex DFTs, Basic Interface
 | |
| @subsection Planner Flags
 | |
| 
 | |
| All of the planner routines in FFTW accept an integer @code{flags}
 | |
| argument, which is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more of the flag
 | |
| constants defined below.  These flags control the rigor (and time) of
 | |
| the planning process, and can also impose (or lift) restrictions on the
 | |
| type of transform algorithm that is employed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @emph{Important:} the planner overwrites the input array during
 | |
| planning unless a saved plan (@pxref{Wisdom}) is available for that
 | |
| problem, so you should initialize your input data after creating the
 | |
| plan.  The only exceptions to this are the @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} and
 | |
| @code{FFTW_WISDOM_ONLY} flags, as mentioned below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In all  cases, if  wisdom is  available for the  given problem  that was
 | |
| created  with equal-or-greater  planning rigor,  then the  more rigorous
 | |
| wisdom is used.  For example, in @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} mode any available
 | |
| wisdom is used, whereas  in @code{FFTW_PATIENT} mode only wisdom created
 | |
| in patient or exhaustive mode can be used.  @xref{Words of Wisdom-Saving
 | |
| Plans}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Planning-rigor flags
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_ESTIMATE
 | |
| @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} specifies that, instead of actual measurements of
 | |
| different algorithms, a simple heuristic is used to pick a (probably
 | |
| sub-optimal) plan quickly.  With this flag, the input/output arrays are
 | |
| not overwritten during planning.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_MEASURE
 | |
| @code{FFTW_MEASURE} tells FFTW to find an optimized plan by actually
 | |
| @emph{computing} several FFTs and measuring their execution time.
 | |
| Depending on your machine, this can take some time (often a few
 | |
| seconds).  @code{FFTW_MEASURE} is the default planning option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_PATIENT
 | |
| @code{FFTW_PATIENT} is like @code{FFTW_MEASURE}, but considers a wider
 | |
| range of algorithms and often produces a ``more optimal'' plan
 | |
| (especially for large transforms), but at the expense of several times
 | |
| longer planning time (especially for large transforms).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_EXHAUSTIVE
 | |
| @code{FFTW_EXHAUSTIVE} is like @code{FFTW_PATIENT}, but considers an
 | |
| even wider range of algorithms, including many that we think are
 | |
| unlikely to be fast, to produce the most optimal plan but with a
 | |
| substantially increased planning time.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_WISDOM_ONLY
 | |
| @code{FFTW_WISDOM_ONLY} is a special planning mode in which the plan
 | |
| is only created if wisdom is available for the given problem, and
 | |
| otherwise a @code{NULL} plan is returned.  This can be combined with
 | |
| other flags, e.g. @samp{FFTW_WISDOM_ONLY | FFTW_PATIENT} creates a
 | |
| plan only if wisdom is available that was created in
 | |
| @code{FFTW_PATIENT} or @code{FFTW_EXHAUSTIVE} mode.  The
 | |
| @code{FFTW_WISDOM_ONLY} flag is intended for users who need to detect
 | |
| whether wisdom is available; for example, if wisdom is not available
 | |
| one may wish to allocate new arrays for planning so that user data is
 | |
| not overwritten.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Algorithm-restriction flags
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_DESTROY_INPUT
 | |
| @code{FFTW_DESTROY_INPUT} specifies that an out-of-place transform is
 | |
| allowed to @emph{overwrite its input} array with arbitrary data; this
 | |
| can sometimes allow more efficient algorithms to be employed.
 | |
| @cindex out-of-place
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_PRESERVE_INPUT
 | |
| @code{FFTW_PRESERVE_INPUT} specifies that an out-of-place transform must
 | |
| @emph{not change its input} array.  This is ordinarily the
 | |
| @emph{default}, except for c2r and hc2r (i.e. complex-to-real)
 | |
| transforms for which @code{FFTW_DESTROY_INPUT} is the default.  In the
 | |
| latter cases, passing @code{FFTW_PRESERVE_INPUT} will attempt to use
 | |
| algorithms that do not destroy the input, at the expense of worse
 | |
| performance; for multi-dimensional c2r transforms, however, no
 | |
| input-preserving algorithms are implemented and the planner will return
 | |
| @code{NULL} if one is requested.
 | |
| @cindex c2r
 | |
| @cindex hc2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_UNALIGNED
 | |
| @cindex alignment
 | |
| @findex fftw_malloc
 | |
| @findex fftw_alignment_of
 | |
| @code{FFTW_UNALIGNED} specifies that the algorithm may not impose any
 | |
| unusual alignment requirements on the input/output arrays (i.e. no
 | |
| SIMD may be used).  This flag is normally @emph{not necessary}, since
 | |
| the planner automatically detects misaligned arrays.  The only use for
 | |
| this flag is if you want to use the new-array execute interface to
 | |
| execute a given plan on a different array that may not be aligned like
 | |
| the original.  (Using @code{fftw_malloc} makes this flag unnecessary
 | |
| even then.  You can also use @code{fftw_alignment_of} to detect
 | |
| whether two arrays are equivalently aligned.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Limiting planning time
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| extern void fftw_set_timelimit(double seconds);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_set_timelimit
 | |
| 
 | |
| This function instructs FFTW to spend at most @code{seconds} seconds
 | |
| (approximately) in the planner.  If @code{seconds ==
 | |
| FFTW_NO_TIMELIMIT} (the default value, which is negative), then
 | |
| planning time is unbounded.  Otherwise, FFTW plans with a
 | |
| progressively wider range of algorithms until the given time limit
 | |
| is reached or the given range of algorithms is explored, returning the
 | |
| best available plan.
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_NO_TIMELIMIT
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| For example, specifying @code{FFTW_PATIENT} first plans in
 | |
| @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} mode, then in @code{FFTW_MEASURE} mode, then
 | |
| finally (time permitting) in @code{FFTW_PATIENT}.  If
 | |
| @code{FFTW_EXHAUSTIVE} is specified instead, the planner will further
 | |
| progress to @code{FFTW_EXHAUSTIVE} mode.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that the @code{seconds} argument specifies only a rough limit; in
 | |
| practice, the planner may use somewhat more time if the time limit is
 | |
| reached when the planner is in the middle of an operation that cannot
 | |
| be interrupted.  At the very least, the planner will complete planning
 | |
| in @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} mode (which is thus equivalent to a time limit
 | |
| of 0).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Real-data DFTs, Real-data DFT Array Format, Planner Flags, Basic Interface
 | |
| @subsection Real-data DFTs
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_r2c_1d(int n0,
 | |
|                                double *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|                                unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_r2c_2d(int n0, int n1,
 | |
|                                double *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|                                unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_r2c_3d(int n0, int n1, int n2,
 | |
|                                double *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|                                unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_r2c(int rank, const int *n,
 | |
|                             double *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|                             unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_r2c_1d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_r2c_2d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_r2c_3d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_r2c
 | |
| @cindex r2c
 | |
| 
 | |
| Plan a real-input/complex-output discrete Fourier transform (DFT) in
 | |
| zero or more dimensions, returning an @code{fftw_plan} (@pxref{Using
 | |
| Plans}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Once you have created a plan for a certain transform type and
 | |
| parameters, then creating another plan of the same type and parameters,
 | |
| but for different arrays, is fast and shares constant data with the
 | |
| first plan (if it still exists).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The planner returns @code{NULL} if the plan cannot be created.  A
 | |
| non-@code{NULL} plan is always returned by the basic interface unless
 | |
| you are using a customized FFTW configuration supporting a restricted
 | |
| set of transforms, or if you use the @code{FFTW_PRESERVE_INPUT} flag
 | |
| with a multi-dimensional out-of-place c2r transform (see below).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Arguments
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{rank} is the rank of the transform (it should be the size of the
 | |
| array @code{*n}), and can be any non-negative integer.  (@xref{Complex
 | |
| Multi-Dimensional DFTs}, for the definition of ``rank''.)  The
 | |
| @samp{_1d}, @samp{_2d}, and @samp{_3d} planners correspond to a
 | |
| @code{rank} of @code{1}, @code{2}, and @code{3}, respectively.  The rank
 | |
| may be zero, which is equivalent to a rank-1 transform of size 1, i.e. a
 | |
| copy of one real number (with zero imaginary part) from input to output.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{n0}, @code{n1}, @code{n2}, or @code{n[0..rank-1]}, (as appropriate
 | |
| for each routine) specify the size of the transform dimensions.  They
 | |
| can be any positive integer.  This is different in general from the
 | |
| @emph{physical} array dimensions, which are described in @ref{Real-data
 | |
| DFT Array Format}.
 | |
|  
 | |
| @itemize @minus
 | |
| @item
 | |
| FFTW is best at handling sizes of the form
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @math{2^a 3^b 5^c 7^d 11^e 13^f},
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $2^a 3^b 5^c 7^d 11^e 13^f$,
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @html
 | |
| 2<sup>a</sup> 3<sup>b</sup> 5<sup>c</sup> 7<sup>d</sup>
 | |
|         11<sup>e</sup> 13<sup>f</sup>,
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| where @math{e+f} is either @math{0} or @math{1}, and the other exponents
 | |
| are arbitrary.  Other sizes are computed by means of a slow,
 | |
| general-purpose algorithm (which nevertheless retains @Onlogn{} performance even for prime sizes).  (It is possible to customize FFTW
 | |
| for different array sizes; see @ref{Installation and Customization}.)
 | |
| Transforms whose sizes are powers of @math{2} are especially fast, and
 | |
| it is generally beneficial for the @emph{last} dimension of an r2c/c2r
 | |
| transform to be @emph{even}.
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{in} and @code{out} point to the input and output arrays of the
 | |
| transform, which may be the same (yielding an in-place transform).
 | |
| @cindex in-place
 | |
| These arrays are overwritten during planning, unless
 | |
| @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} is used in the flags.  (The arrays need not be
 | |
| initialized, but they must be allocated.)  For an in-place transform, it
 | |
| is important to remember that the real array will require padding,
 | |
| described in @ref{Real-data DFT Array Format}.
 | |
| @cindex padding
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @cindex flags
 | |
| @code{flags} is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more planner flags,
 | |
| as defined in @ref{Planner Flags}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| The inverse transforms, taking complex input (storing the non-redundant
 | |
| half of a logically Hermitian array) to real output, are given by:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_c2r_1d(int n0,
 | |
|                                fftw_complex *in, double *out,
 | |
|                                unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_c2r_2d(int n0, int n1,
 | |
|                                fftw_complex *in, double *out,
 | |
|                                unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_c2r_3d(int n0, int n1, int n2,
 | |
|                                fftw_complex *in, double *out,
 | |
|                                unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_dft_c2r(int rank, const int *n,
 | |
|                             fftw_complex *in, double *out,
 | |
|                             unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_c2r_1d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_c2r_2d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_c2r_3d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_dft_c2r
 | |
| @cindex c2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| The arguments are the same as for the r2c transforms, except that the
 | |
| input and output data formats are reversed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| FFTW computes an unnormalized transform: computing an r2c followed by a
 | |
| c2r transform (or vice versa) will result in the original data
 | |
| multiplied by the size of the transform (the product of the logical
 | |
| dimensions).
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| An r2c transform produces the same output as a @code{FFTW_FORWARD}
 | |
| complex DFT of the same input, and a c2r transform is correspondingly
 | |
| equivalent to @code{FFTW_BACKWARD}.  For more information, see @ref{What
 | |
| FFTW Really Computes}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Real-data DFT Array Format, Real-to-Real Transforms, Real-data DFTs, Basic Interface
 | |
| @subsection Real-data DFT Array Format
 | |
| @cindex r2c/c2r multi-dimensional array format
 | |
| 
 | |
| The output of a DFT of real data (r2c) contains symmetries that, in
 | |
| principle, make half of the outputs redundant (@pxref{What FFTW Really
 | |
| Computes}).  (Similarly for the input of an inverse c2r transform.)  In
 | |
| practice, it is not possible to entirely realize these savings in an
 | |
| efficient and understandable format that generalizes to
 | |
| multi-dimensional transforms.  Instead, the output of the r2c
 | |
| transforms is @emph{slightly} over half of the output of the
 | |
| corresponding complex transform.  We do not ``pack'' the data in any
 | |
| way, but store it as an ordinary array of @code{fftw_complex} values.
 | |
| In fact, this data is simply a subsection of what would be the array in
 | |
| the corresponding complex transform.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Specifically, for a real transform of @math{d} (= @code{rank})
 | |
| dimensions @ndims{}, the complex data is an @ndimshalf array of
 | |
| @code{fftw_complex} values in row-major order (with the division rounded
 | |
| down).  That is, we only store the @emph{lower} half (non-negative
 | |
| frequencies), plus one element, of the last dimension of the data from
 | |
| the ordinary complex transform.  (We could have instead taken half of
 | |
| any other dimension, but implementation turns out to be simpler if the
 | |
| last, contiguous, dimension is used.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex out-of-place
 | |
| For an out-of-place transform, the real data is simply an array with
 | |
| physical dimensions @ndims in row-major order.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex in-place
 | |
| @cindex padding
 | |
| For an in-place transform, some complications arise since the complex data
 | |
| is slightly larger than the real data.  In this case, the final
 | |
| dimension of the real data must be @emph{padded} with extra values to
 | |
| accommodate the size of the complex data---two extra if the last
 | |
| dimension is even and one if it is odd.  That is, the last dimension of
 | |
| the real data must physically contain
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $2 (n_{d-1}/2+1)$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| 2 * (n[d-1]/2+1)
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| 2 * (n<sub>d-1</sub>/2+1)
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @code{double} values (exactly enough to hold the complex data).  This
 | |
| physical array size does not, however, change the @emph{logical} array
 | |
| size---only
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $n_{d-1}$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| n[d-1]
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| n<sub>d-1</sub>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| values are actually stored in the last dimension, and
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $n_{d-1}$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| n[d-1]
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| n<sub>d-1</sub>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| is the last dimension passed to the planner.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Real-to-Real Transforms, Real-to-Real Transform Kinds, Real-data DFT Array Format, Basic Interface
 | |
| @subsection Real-to-Real Transforms
 | |
| @cindex r2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_r2r_1d(int n, double *in, double *out,
 | |
|                            fftw_r2r_kind kind, unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_r2r_2d(int n0, int n1, double *in, double *out,
 | |
|                            fftw_r2r_kind kind0, fftw_r2r_kind kind1,
 | |
|                            unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_r2r_3d(int n0, int n1, int n2,
 | |
|                            double *in, double *out,
 | |
|                            fftw_r2r_kind kind0,
 | |
|                            fftw_r2r_kind kind1,
 | |
|                            fftw_r2r_kind kind2,
 | |
|                            unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_r2r(int rank, const int *n, double *in, double *out,
 | |
|                         const fftw_r2r_kind *kind, unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_r2r_1d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_r2r_2d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_r2r_3d
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_r2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| Plan a real input/output (r2r) transform of various kinds in zero or
 | |
| more dimensions, returning an @code{fftw_plan} (@pxref{Using Plans}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Once you have created a plan for a certain transform type and
 | |
| parameters, then creating another plan of the same type and parameters,
 | |
| but for different arrays, is fast and shares constant data with the
 | |
| first plan (if it still exists).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The planner returns @code{NULL} if the plan cannot be created.  A
 | |
| non-@code{NULL} plan is always returned by the basic interface unless
 | |
| you are using a customized FFTW configuration supporting a restricted
 | |
| set of transforms, or for size-1 @code{FFTW_REDFT00} kinds (which are
 | |
| not defined).
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_REDFT00
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Arguments
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{rank} is the dimensionality of the transform (it should be the
 | |
| size of the arrays @code{*n} and @code{*kind}), and can be any
 | |
| non-negative integer.  The @samp{_1d}, @samp{_2d}, and @samp{_3d}
 | |
| planners correspond to a @code{rank} of @code{1}, @code{2}, and
 | |
| @code{3}, respectively.  A @code{rank} of zero is equivalent to a copy
 | |
| of one number from input to output.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{n}, or @code{n0}/@code{n1}/@code{n2}, or @code{n[rank]},
 | |
| respectively, gives the (physical) size of the transform dimensions.
 | |
| They can be any positive integer.
 | |
|  
 | |
| @itemize @minus
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @cindex row-major
 | |
| Multi-dimensional arrays are stored in row-major order with dimensions:
 | |
| @code{n0} x @code{n1}; or @code{n0} x @code{n1} x @code{n2}; or
 | |
| @code{n[0]} x @code{n[1]} x ... x @code{n[rank-1]}.
 | |
| @xref{Multi-dimensional Array Format}.
 | |
| @item
 | |
| FFTW is generally best at handling sizes of the form
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @math{2^a 3^b 5^c 7^d 11^e 13^f},
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $2^a 3^b 5^c 7^d 11^e 13^f$,
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @html
 | |
| 2<sup>a</sup> 3<sup>b</sup> 5<sup>c</sup> 7<sup>d</sup>
 | |
|         11<sup>e</sup> 13<sup>f</sup>,
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| where @math{e+f} is either @math{0} or @math{1}, and the other exponents
 | |
| are arbitrary.  Other sizes are computed by means of a slow,
 | |
| general-purpose algorithm (which nevertheless retains @Onlogn{} performance even for prime sizes).  (It is possible to customize FFTW
 | |
| for different array sizes; see @ref{Installation and Customization}.)
 | |
| Transforms whose sizes are powers of @math{2} are especially fast.
 | |
| @item
 | |
| For a @code{REDFT00} or @code{RODFT00} transform kind in a dimension of
 | |
| size @math{n}, it is @math{n-1} or @math{n+1}, respectively, that
 | |
| should be factorizable in the above form.
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{in} and @code{out} point to the input and output arrays of the
 | |
| transform, which may be the same (yielding an in-place transform).
 | |
| @cindex in-place
 | |
| These arrays are overwritten during planning, unless
 | |
| @code{FFTW_ESTIMATE} is used in the flags.  (The arrays need not be
 | |
| initialized, but they must be allocated.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @code{kind}, or @code{kind0}/@code{kind1}/@code{kind2}, or
 | |
| @code{kind[rank]}, is the kind of r2r transform used for the
 | |
| corresponding dimension.  The valid kind constants are described in
 | |
| @ref{Real-to-Real Transform Kinds}.  In a multi-dimensional transform,
 | |
| what is computed is the separable product formed by taking each
 | |
| transform kind along the corresponding dimension, one dimension after
 | |
| another.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @cindex flags
 | |
| @code{flags} is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more planner flags,
 | |
| as defined in @ref{Planner Flags}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Real-to-Real Transform Kinds,  , Real-to-Real Transforms, Basic Interface
 | |
| @subsection Real-to-Real Transform Kinds
 | |
| @cindex kind (r2r)
 | |
| 
 | |
| FFTW currently supports 11 different r2r transform kinds, specified by
 | |
| one of the constants below.  For the precise definitions of these
 | |
| transforms, see @ref{What FFTW Really Computes}.  For a more colloquial
 | |
| introduction to these transform kinds, see @ref{More DFTs of Real Data}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For dimension of size @code{n}, there is a corresponding ``logical''
 | |
| dimension @code{N} that determines the normalization (and the optimal
 | |
| factorization); the formula for @code{N} is given for each kind below.
 | |
| Also, with each transform kind is listed its corrsponding inverse
 | |
| transform.  FFTW computes unnormalized transforms: a transform followed
 | |
| by its inverse will result in the original data multiplied by @code{N}
 | |
| (or the product of the @code{N}'s for each dimension, in
 | |
| multi-dimensions).
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| 
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_R2HC
 | |
| @code{FFTW_R2HC} computes a real-input DFT with output in
 | |
| ``halfcomplex'' format, i.e. real and imaginary parts for a transform of
 | |
| size @code{n} stored as:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| r_0, r_1, r_2, \ldots, r_{n/2}, i_{(n+1)/2-1}, \ldots, i_2, i_1
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| r0, r1, r2, r(n/2), i((n+1)/2-1), ..., i2, i1
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <p align=center>
 | |
| r<sub>0</sub>, r<sub>1</sub>, r<sub>2</sub>, ..., r<sub>n/2</sub>, i<sub>(n+1)/2-1</sub>, ..., i<sub>2</sub>, i<sub>1</sub>
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_HC2R}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_HC2R
 | |
| @code{FFTW_HC2R} computes the reverse of @code{FFTW_R2HC}, above.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_R2HC}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_DHT
 | |
| @code{FFTW_DHT} computes a discrete Hartley transform.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_DHT}.)
 | |
| @cindex discrete Hartley transform
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_REDFT00
 | |
| @code{FFTW_REDFT00} computes an REDFT00 transform, i.e. a DCT-I.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*(n-1)}, inverse is @code{FFTW_REDFT00}.)
 | |
| @cindex discrete cosine transform
 | |
| @cindex DCT
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_REDFT10
 | |
| @code{FFTW_REDFT10} computes an REDFT10 transform, i.e. a DCT-II (sometimes called ``the'' DCT).
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_REDFT01}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_REDFT01
 | |
| @code{FFTW_REDFT01} computes an REDFT01 transform, i.e. a DCT-III (sometimes called ``the'' IDCT, being the inverse of DCT-II).
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_REDFT=10}.)
 | |
| @cindex IDCT
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_REDFT11
 | |
| @code{FFTW_REDFT11} computes an REDFT11 transform, i.e. a DCT-IV.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_REDFT11}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_RODFT00
 | |
| @code{FFTW_RODFT00} computes an RODFT00 transform, i.e. a DST-I.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*(n+1)}, inverse is @code{FFTW_RODFT00}.)
 | |
| @cindex discrete sine transform
 | |
| @cindex DST
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_RODFT10
 | |
| @code{FFTW_RODFT10} computes an RODFT10 transform, i.e. a DST-II.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_RODFT01}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_RODFT01
 | |
| @code{FFTW_RODFT01} computes an RODFT01 transform, i.e. a DST-III.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_RODFT=10}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_RODFT11
 | |
| @code{FFTW_RODFT11} computes an RODFT11 transform, i.e. a DST-IV.
 | |
| (Logical @code{N=2*n}, inverse is @code{FFTW_RODFT11}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| @node Advanced Interface, Guru Interface, Basic Interface, FFTW Reference
 | |
| @section Advanced Interface
 | |
| @cindex advanced interface
 | |
| 
 | |
| FFTW's ``advanced'' interface supplements the basic interface with four
 | |
| new planner routines, providing a new level of flexibility: you can plan
 | |
| a transform of multiple arrays simultaneously, operate on non-contiguous
 | |
| (strided) data, and transform a subset of a larger multi-dimensional
 | |
| array.  Other than these additional features, the planner operates in
 | |
| the same fashion as in the basic interface, and the resulting
 | |
| @code{fftw_plan} is used in the same way (@pxref{Using Plans}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @menu
 | |
| * Advanced Complex DFTs::
 | |
| * Advanced Real-data DFTs::
 | |
| * Advanced Real-to-real Transforms::
 | |
| @end menu
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Advanced Complex DFTs, Advanced Real-data DFTs, Advanced Interface, Advanced Interface
 | |
| @subsection Advanced Complex DFTs
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_many_dft(int rank, const int *n, int howmany,
 | |
|                              fftw_complex *in, const int *inembed,
 | |
|                              int istride, int idist,
 | |
|                              fftw_complex *out, const int *onembed,
 | |
|                              int ostride, int odist,
 | |
|                              int sign, unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_many_dft
 | |
| 
 | |
| This routine plans multiple multidimensional complex DFTs, and it
 | |
| extends the @code{fftw_plan_dft} routine (@pxref{Complex DFTs}) to
 | |
| compute @code{howmany} transforms, each having rank @code{rank} and size
 | |
| @code{n}.  In addition, the transform data need not be contiguous, but
 | |
| it may be laid out in memory with an arbitrary stride.  To account for
 | |
| these possibilities, @code{fftw_plan_many_dft} adds the new parameters
 | |
| @code{howmany}, @{@code{i},@code{o}@}@code{nembed},
 | |
| @{@code{i},@code{o}@}@code{stride}, and
 | |
| @{@code{i},@code{o}@}@code{dist}.  The FFTW basic interface
 | |
| (@pxref{Complex DFTs}) provides routines specialized for ranks 1, 2,
 | |
| and@tie{}3, but the advanced interface handles only the general-rank
 | |
| case.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{howmany} is the (nonnegative) number of transforms to compute.  The resulting
 | |
| plan computes @code{howmany} transforms, where the input of the
 | |
| @code{k}-th transform is at location @code{in+k*idist} (in C pointer
 | |
| arithmetic), and its output is at location @code{out+k*odist}.  Plans
 | |
| obtained in this way can often be faster than calling FFTW multiple
 | |
| times for the individual transforms.  The basic @code{fftw_plan_dft}
 | |
| interface corresponds to @code{howmany=1} (in which case the @code{dist}
 | |
| parameters are ignored).
 | |
| @cindex howmany parameter
 | |
| @cindex dist
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Each of the @code{howmany} transforms has rank @code{rank} and size
 | |
| @code{n}, as in the basic interface.  In addition, the advanced
 | |
| interface allows the input and output arrays of each transform to be
 | |
| row-major subarrays of larger rank-@code{rank} arrays, described by
 | |
| @code{inembed} and @code{onembed} parameters, respectively.
 | |
| @{@code{i},@code{o}@}@code{nembed} must be arrays of length @code{rank},
 | |
| and @code{n} should be elementwise less than or equal to
 | |
| @{@code{i},@code{o}@}@code{nembed}.  Passing @code{NULL} for an
 | |
| @code{nembed} parameter is equivalent to passing @code{n} (i.e. same
 | |
| physical and logical dimensions, as in the basic interface.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The @code{stride} parameters indicate that the @code{j}-th element of
 | |
| the input or output arrays is located at @code{j*istride} or
 | |
| @code{j*ostride}, respectively.  (For a multi-dimensional array,
 | |
| @code{j} is the ordinary row-major index.)  When combined with the
 | |
| @code{k}-th transform in a @code{howmany} loop, from above, this means
 | |
| that the (@code{j},@code{k})-th element is at @code{j*stride+k*dist}.
 | |
| (The basic @code{fftw_plan_dft} interface corresponds to a stride of 1.)
 | |
| @cindex stride
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| For in-place transforms, the input and output @code{stride} and
 | |
| @code{dist} parameters should be the same; otherwise, the planner may
 | |
| return @code{NULL}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Arrays @code{n}, @code{inembed}, and @code{onembed} are not used after
 | |
| this function returns.  You can safely free or reuse them.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @strong{Examples}:
 | |
| One transform of one 5 by 6 array contiguous in memory:
 | |
| @example
 | |
|    int rank = 2;
 | |
|    int n[] = @{5, 6@};
 | |
|    int howmany = 1;
 | |
|    int idist = odist = 0; /* unused because howmany = 1 */
 | |
|    int istride = ostride = 1; /* array is contiguous in memory */
 | |
|    int *inembed = n, *onembed = n;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| 
 | |
| Transform of three 5 by 6 arrays, each contiguous in memory,
 | |
| stored in memory one after another:
 | |
| @example
 | |
|    int rank = 2;
 | |
|    int n[] = @{5, 6@};
 | |
|    int howmany = 3;
 | |
|    int idist = odist = n[0]*n[1]; /* = 30, the distance in memory
 | |
|                                      between the first element
 | |
|                                      of the first array and the
 | |
|                                      first element of the second array */
 | |
|    int istride = ostride = 1; /* array is contiguous in memory */
 | |
|    int *inembed = n, *onembed = n;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| 
 | |
| Transform each column of a 2d array with 10 rows and 3 columns:
 | |
| @example
 | |
|    int rank = 1; /* not 2: we are computing 1d transforms */
 | |
|    int n[] = @{10@}; /* 1d transforms of length 10 */
 | |
|    int howmany = 3;
 | |
|    int idist = odist = 1;
 | |
|    int istride = ostride = 3; /* distance between two elements in 
 | |
|                                  the same column */
 | |
|    int *inembed = n, *onembed = n;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Advanced Real-data DFTs, Advanced Real-to-real Transforms, Advanced Complex DFTs, Advanced Interface
 | |
| @subsection Advanced Real-data DFTs
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_many_dft_r2c(int rank, const int *n, int howmany,
 | |
|                                  double *in, const int *inembed,
 | |
|                                  int istride, int idist,
 | |
|                                  fftw_complex *out, const int *onembed,
 | |
|                                  int ostride, int odist,
 | |
|                                  unsigned flags);
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_many_dft_c2r(int rank, const int *n, int howmany,
 | |
|                                  fftw_complex *in, const int *inembed,
 | |
|                                  int istride, int idist,
 | |
|                                  double *out, const int *onembed,
 | |
|                                  int ostride, int odist,
 | |
|                                  unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_many_dft_r2c
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_many_dft_c2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| Like @code{fftw_plan_many_dft}, these two functions add @code{howmany},
 | |
| @code{nembed}, @code{stride}, and @code{dist} parameters to the
 | |
| @code{fftw_plan_dft_r2c} and @code{fftw_plan_dft_c2r} functions, but
 | |
| otherwise behave the same as the basic interface.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The interpretation of @code{howmany}, @code{stride}, and @code{dist} are
 | |
| the same as for @code{fftw_plan_many_dft}, above.  Note that the
 | |
| @code{stride} and @code{dist} for the real array are in units of
 | |
| @code{double}, and for the complex array are in units of
 | |
| @code{fftw_complex}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If an @code{nembed} parameter is @code{NULL}, it is interpreted as what
 | |
| it would be in the basic interface, as described in @ref{Real-data DFT
 | |
| Array Format}.  That is, for the complex array the size is assumed to be
 | |
| the same as @code{n}, but with the last dimension cut roughly in half.
 | |
| For the real array, the size is assumed to be @code{n} if the transform
 | |
| is out-of-place, or @code{n} with the last dimension ``padded'' if the
 | |
| transform is in-place.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If an @code{nembed} parameter is non-@code{NULL}, it is interpreted as
 | |
| the physical size of the corresponding array, in row-major order, just
 | |
| as for @code{fftw_plan_many_dft}.  In this case, each dimension of
 | |
| @code{nembed} should be @code{>=} what it would be in the basic
 | |
| interface (e.g. the halved or padded @code{n}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Arrays @code{n}, @code{inembed}, and @code{onembed} are not used after
 | |
| this function returns.  You can safely free or reuse them.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Advanced Real-to-real Transforms,  , Advanced Real-data DFTs, Advanced Interface
 | |
| @subsection Advanced Real-to-real Transforms
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_many_r2r(int rank, const int *n, int howmany,
 | |
|                              double *in, const int *inembed,
 | |
|                              int istride, int idist,
 | |
|                              double *out, const int *onembed,
 | |
|                              int ostride, int odist,
 | |
|                              const fftw_r2r_kind *kind, unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_many_r2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| Like @code{fftw_plan_many_dft}, this functions adds @code{howmany},
 | |
| @code{nembed}, @code{stride}, and @code{dist} parameters to the
 | |
| @code{fftw_plan_r2r} function, but otherwise behave the same as the
 | |
| basic interface.  The interpretation of those additional parameters are
 | |
| the same as for @code{fftw_plan_many_dft}.  (Of course, the
 | |
| @code{stride} and @code{dist} parameters are now in units of
 | |
| @code{double}, not @code{fftw_complex}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Arrays @code{n}, @code{inembed}, @code{onembed}, and @code{kind} are not
 | |
| used after this function returns.  You can safely free or reuse them.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| @node Guru Interface, New-array Execute Functions, Advanced Interface, FFTW Reference
 | |
| @section Guru Interface
 | |
| @cindex guru interface
 | |
| 
 | |
| The ``guru'' interface to FFTW is intended to expose as much as possible
 | |
| of the flexibility in the underlying FFTW architecture.  It allows one
 | |
| to compute multi-dimensional ``vectors'' (loops) of multi-dimensional
 | |
| transforms, where each vector/transform dimension has an independent
 | |
| size and stride.
 | |
| @cindex vector
 | |
| One can also use more general complex-number formats, e.g. separate real
 | |
| and imaginary arrays.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For those users who require the flexibility of the guru interface, it is
 | |
| important that they pay special attention to the documentation lest they
 | |
| shoot themselves in the foot.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @menu
 | |
| * Interleaved and split arrays::
 | |
| * Guru vector and transform sizes::
 | |
| * Guru Complex DFTs::
 | |
| * Guru Real-data DFTs::
 | |
| * Guru Real-to-real Transforms::
 | |
| * 64-bit Guru Interface::
 | |
| @end menu
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node  Interleaved and split arrays, Guru vector and transform sizes, Guru Interface, Guru Interface
 | |
| @subsection Interleaved and split arrays
 | |
| 
 | |
| The guru interface supports two representations of complex numbers,
 | |
| which we call the interleaved and the split format.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The @dfn{interleaved} format is the same one used by the basic and
 | |
| advanced interfaces, and it is documented in @ref{Complex numbers}.
 | |
| In the interleaved format, you provide pointers to the real part of a
 | |
| complex number, and the imaginary part understood to be stored in the
 | |
| next memory location.
 | |
| @cindex interleaved format
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The @dfn{split} format allows separate pointers to the real and
 | |
| imaginary parts of a complex array.
 | |
| @cindex split format
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Technically, the interleaved format is redundant, because you can
 | |
| always express an interleaved array in terms of a split array with
 | |
| appropriate pointers and strides.  On the other hand, the interleaved
 | |
| format is simpler to use, and it is common in practice.  Hence, FFTW
 | |
| supports it as a special case.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Guru vector and transform sizes, Guru Complex DFTs, Interleaved and split arrays, Guru Interface
 | |
| @subsection Guru vector and transform sizes
 | |
| 
 | |
| The guru interface introduces one basic new data structure,
 | |
| @code{fftw_iodim}, that is used to specify sizes and strides for
 | |
| multi-dimensional transforms and vectors:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| typedef struct @{
 | |
|      int n;
 | |
|      int is;
 | |
|      int os;
 | |
| @} fftw_iodim;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @tindex fftw_iodim
 | |
| 
 | |
| Here, @code{n} is the size of the dimension, and @code{is} and @code{os}
 | |
| are the strides of that dimension for the input and output arrays.  (The
 | |
| stride is the separation of consecutive elements along this dimension.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The meaning of the stride parameter depends on the type of the array
 | |
| that the stride refers to.  @emph{If the array is interleaved complex,
 | |
| strides are expressed in units of complex numbers
 | |
| (@code{fftw_complex}).  If the array is split complex or real, strides
 | |
| are expressed in units of real numbers (@code{double}).}  This
 | |
| convention is consistent with the usual pointer arithmetic in the C
 | |
| language.  An interleaved array is denoted by a pointer @code{p} to
 | |
| @code{fftw_complex}, so that @code{p+1} points to the next complex
 | |
| number.  Split arrays are denoted by pointers to @code{double}, in
 | |
| which case pointer arithmetic operates in units of
 | |
| @code{sizeof(double)}.
 | |
| @cindex stride
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The guru planner interfaces all take a (@code{rank}, @code{dims[rank]})
 | |
| pair describing the transform size, and a (@code{howmany_rank},
 | |
| @code{howmany_dims[howmany_rank]}) pair describing the ``vector'' size (a
 | |
| multi-dimensional loop of transforms to perform), where @code{dims} and
 | |
| @code{howmany_dims} are arrays of @code{fftw_iodim}.  Each @code{n} field must
 | |
| be positive for @code{dims} and nonnegative for @code{howmany_dims}, while both
 | |
| @code{rank} and @code{howmany_rank} must be nonnegative.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For example, the @code{howmany} parameter in the advanced complex-DFT
 | |
| interface corresponds to @code{howmany_rank} = 1,
 | |
| @code{howmany_dims[0].n} = @code{howmany}, @code{howmany_dims[0].is} =
 | |
| @code{idist}, and @code{howmany_dims[0].os} = @code{odist}.
 | |
| @cindex howmany loop
 | |
| @cindex dist
 | |
| (To compute a single transform, you can just use @code{howmany_rank} = 0.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| A row-major multidimensional array with dimensions @code{n[rank]}
 | |
| (@pxref{Row-major Format}) corresponds to @code{dims[i].n} =
 | |
| @code{n[i]} and the recurrence @code{dims[i].is} = @code{n[i+1] *
 | |
| dims[i+1].is} (similarly for @code{os}).  The stride of the last
 | |
| (@code{i=rank-1}) dimension is the overall stride of the array.
 | |
| e.g. to be equivalent to the advanced complex-DFT interface, you would
 | |
| have @code{dims[rank-1].is} = @code{istride} and
 | |
| @code{dims[rank-1].os} = @code{ostride}.
 | |
| @cindex row-major
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In general, we only guarantee FFTW to return a non-@code{NULL} plan if
 | |
| the vector and transform dimensions correspond to a set of distinct
 | |
| indices, and for in-place transforms the input/output strides should
 | |
| be the same.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Guru Complex DFTs, Guru Real-data DFTs, Guru vector and transform sizes, Guru Interface
 | |
| @subsection Guru Complex DFTs
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_dft(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|      int sign, unsigned flags);
 | |
| 
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_split_dft(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      double *ri, double *ii, double *ro, double *io,
 | |
|      unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_dft
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_split_dft
 | |
| 
 | |
| These two functions plan a complex-data, multi-dimensional DFT
 | |
| for the interleaved and split format, respectively.
 | |
| Transform dimensions are given by (@code{rank}, @code{dims}) over a
 | |
| multi-dimensional vector (loop) of dimensions (@code{howmany_rank},
 | |
| @code{howmany_dims}).  @code{dims} and @code{howmany_dims} should point
 | |
| to @code{fftw_iodim} arrays of length @code{rank} and
 | |
| @code{howmany_rank}, respectively.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex flags
 | |
| @code{flags} is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more planner flags,
 | |
| as defined in @ref{Planner Flags}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In the @code{fftw_plan_guru_dft} function, the pointers @code{in} and
 | |
| @code{out} point to the interleaved input and output arrays,
 | |
| respectively.  The sign can be either @math{-1} (=
 | |
| @code{FFTW_FORWARD}) or @math{+1} (= @code{FFTW_BACKWARD}).  If the
 | |
| pointers are equal, the transform is in-place.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In the @code{fftw_plan_guru_split_dft} function,
 | |
| @code{ri} and @code{ii} point to the real and imaginary input arrays,
 | |
| and @code{ro} and @code{io} point to the real and imaginary output
 | |
| arrays.  The input and output pointers may be the same, indicating an
 | |
| in-place transform.  For example, for @code{fftw_complex} pointers
 | |
| @code{in} and @code{out}, the corresponding parameters are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| ri = (double *) in;
 | |
| ii = (double *) in + 1;
 | |
| ro = (double *) out;
 | |
| io = (double *) out + 1;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| 
 | |
| Because @code{fftw_plan_guru_split_dft} accepts split arrays, strides
 | |
| are expressed in units of @code{double}.  For a contiguous
 | |
| @code{fftw_complex} array, the overall stride of the transform should
 | |
| be 2, the distance between consecutive real parts or between
 | |
| consecutive imaginary parts; see @ref{Guru vector and transform
 | |
| sizes}.  Note that the dimension strides are applied equally to the
 | |
| real and imaginary parts; real and imaginary arrays with different
 | |
| strides are not supported.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There is no @code{sign} parameter in @code{fftw_plan_guru_split_dft}.
 | |
| This function always plans for an @code{FFTW_FORWARD} transform.  To
 | |
| plan for an @code{FFTW_BACKWARD} transform, you can exploit the
 | |
| identity that the backwards DFT is equal to the forwards DFT with the
 | |
| real and imaginary parts swapped.  For example, in the case of the
 | |
| @code{fftw_complex} arrays above, the @code{FFTW_BACKWARD} transform
 | |
| is computed by the parameters:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| ri = (double *) in + 1;
 | |
| ii = (double *) in;
 | |
| ro = (double *) out + 1;
 | |
| io = (double *) out;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Guru Real-data DFTs, Guru Real-to-real Transforms, Guru Complex DFTs, Guru Interface
 | |
| @subsection Guru Real-data DFTs
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_dft_r2c(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      double *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|      unsigned flags);
 | |
| 
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_split_dft_r2c(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      double *in, double *ro, double *io,
 | |
|      unsigned flags);
 | |
| 
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_dft_c2r(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      fftw_complex *in, double *out,
 | |
|      unsigned flags);
 | |
| 
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_split_dft_c2r(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      double *ri, double *ii, double *out,
 | |
|      unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_dft_r2c
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_split_dft_r2c
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_dft_c2r
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_split_dft_c2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| Plan a real-input (r2c) or real-output (c2r), multi-dimensional DFT with
 | |
| transform dimensions given by (@code{rank}, @code{dims}) over a
 | |
| multi-dimensional vector (loop) of dimensions (@code{howmany_rank},
 | |
| @code{howmany_dims}).  @code{dims} and @code{howmany_dims} should point
 | |
| to @code{fftw_iodim} arrays of length @code{rank} and
 | |
| @code{howmany_rank}, respectively.  As for the basic and advanced
 | |
| interfaces, an r2c transform is @code{FFTW_FORWARD} and a c2r transform
 | |
| is @code{FFTW_BACKWARD}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The @emph{last} dimension of @code{dims} is interpreted specially:
 | |
| that dimension of the real array has size @code{dims[rank-1].n}, but
 | |
| that dimension of the complex array has size @code{dims[rank-1].n/2+1}
 | |
| (division rounded down).  The strides, on the other hand, are taken to
 | |
| be exactly as specified.  It is up to the user to specify the strides
 | |
| appropriately for the peculiar dimensions of the data, and we do not
 | |
| guarantee that the planner will succeed (return non-@code{NULL}) for
 | |
| any dimensions other than those described in @ref{Real-data DFT Array
 | |
| Format} and generalized in @ref{Advanced Real-data DFTs}.  (That is,
 | |
| for an in-place transform, each individual dimension should be able to
 | |
| operate in place.)
 | |
| @cindex in-place
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{in} and @code{out} point to the input and output arrays for r2c
 | |
| and c2r transforms, respectively.  For split arrays, @code{ri} and
 | |
| @code{ii} point to the real and imaginary input arrays for a c2r
 | |
| transform, and @code{ro} and @code{io} point to the real and imaginary
 | |
| output arrays for an r2c transform.  @code{in} and @code{ro} or
 | |
| @code{ri} and @code{out} may be the same, indicating an in-place
 | |
| transform.   (In-place transforms where @code{in} and @code{io} or
 | |
| @code{ii} and @code{out} are the same are not currently supported.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex flags
 | |
| @code{flags} is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more planner flags,
 | |
| as defined in @ref{Planner Flags}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In-place transforms of rank greater than 1 are currently only
 | |
| supported for interleaved arrays.  For split arrays, the planner will
 | |
| return @code{NULL}.
 | |
| @cindex in-place
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Guru Real-to-real Transforms, 64-bit Guru Interface, Guru Real-data DFTs, Guru Interface
 | |
| @subsection Guru Real-to-real Transforms
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru_r2r(int rank, const fftw_iodim *dims,
 | |
|                              int howmany_rank,
 | |
|                              const fftw_iodim *howmany_dims,
 | |
|                              double *in, double *out,
 | |
|                              const fftw_r2r_kind *kind,
 | |
|                              unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru_r2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| Plan a real-to-real (r2r) multi-dimensional @code{FFTW_FORWARD}
 | |
| transform with transform dimensions given by (@code{rank}, @code{dims})
 | |
| over a multi-dimensional vector (loop) of dimensions
 | |
| (@code{howmany_rank}, @code{howmany_dims}).  @code{dims} and
 | |
| @code{howmany_dims} should point to @code{fftw_iodim} arrays of length
 | |
| @code{rank} and @code{howmany_rank}, respectively.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The transform kind of each dimension is given by the @code{kind}
 | |
| parameter, which should point to an array of length @code{rank}.  Valid
 | |
| @code{fftw_r2r_kind} constants are given in @ref{Real-to-Real Transform
 | |
| Kinds}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{in} and @code{out} point to the real input and output arrays; they
 | |
| may be the same, indicating an in-place transform.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex flags
 | |
| @code{flags} is a bitwise OR (@samp{|}) of zero or more planner flags,
 | |
| as defined in @ref{Planner Flags}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node 64-bit Guru Interface,  , Guru Real-to-real Transforms, Guru Interface
 | |
| @subsection 64-bit Guru Interface
 | |
| @cindex 64-bit architecture
 | |
| 
 | |
| When compiled in 64-bit mode on a 64-bit architecture (where addresses
 | |
| are 64 bits wide), FFTW uses 64-bit quantities internally for all
 | |
| transform sizes, strides, and so on---you don't have to do anything
 | |
| special to exploit this.  However, in the ordinary FFTW interfaces,
 | |
| you specify the transform size by an @code{int} quantity, which is
 | |
| normally only 32 bits wide.  This means that, even though FFTW is
 | |
| using 64-bit sizes internally, you cannot specify a single transform
 | |
| dimension larger than
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| 2^31-1
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| 2<sup><small>31</small></sup>−1
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $2^{31}-1$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| numbers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| We expect that few users will require transforms larger than this, but,
 | |
| for those who do, we provide a 64-bit version of the guru interface in
 | |
| which all sizes are specified as integers of type @code{ptrdiff_t}
 | |
| instead of @code{int}.  (@code{ptrdiff_t} is a signed integer type
 | |
| defined by the C standard to be wide enough to represent address
 | |
| differences, and thus must be at least 64 bits wide on a 64-bit
 | |
| machine.)  We stress that there is @emph{no performance advantage} to
 | |
| using this interface---the same internal FFTW code is employed
 | |
| regardless---and it is only necessary if you want to specify very
 | |
| large transform sizes.
 | |
| @tindex ptrdiff_t
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In particular, the 64-bit guru interface is a set of planner routines
 | |
| that are exactly the same as the guru planner routines, except that
 | |
| they are named with @samp{guru64} instead of @samp{guru} and they take
 | |
| arguments of type @code{fftw_iodim64} instead of @code{fftw_iodim}.
 | |
| For example, instead of @code{fftw_plan_guru_dft}, we have
 | |
| @code{fftw_plan_guru64_dft}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| fftw_plan fftw_plan_guru64_dft(
 | |
|      int rank, const fftw_iodim64 *dims,
 | |
|      int howmany_rank, const fftw_iodim64 *howmany_dims,
 | |
|      fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out,
 | |
|      int sign, unsigned flags);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_plan_guru64_dft
 | |
| 
 | |
| The @code{fftw_iodim64} type is similar to @code{fftw_iodim}, with the
 | |
| same interpretation, except that it uses type @code{ptrdiff_t} instead
 | |
| of type @code{int}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| typedef struct @{
 | |
|      ptrdiff_t n;
 | |
|      ptrdiff_t is;
 | |
|      ptrdiff_t os;
 | |
| @} fftw_iodim64;
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @tindex fftw_iodim64
 | |
| 
 | |
| Every other @samp{fftw_plan_guru} function also has a
 | |
| @samp{fftw_plan_guru64} equivalent, but we do not repeat their
 | |
| documentation here since they are identical to the 32-bit versions
 | |
| except as noted above.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c -----------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| @node New-array Execute Functions, Wisdom, Guru Interface, FFTW Reference
 | |
| @section New-array Execute Functions
 | |
| @cindex execute
 | |
| @cindex new-array execution
 | |
| 
 | |
| Normally, one executes a plan for the arrays with which the plan was
 | |
| created, by calling @code{fftw_execute(plan)} as described in @ref{Using
 | |
| Plans}.
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute
 | |
| However, it is possible for sophisticated users to apply a given plan
 | |
| to a @emph{different} array using the ``new-array execute'' functions
 | |
| detailed below, provided that the following conditions are met:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @itemize @bullet
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| The array size, strides, etcetera are the same (since those are set by
 | |
| the plan).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| The input and output arrays are the same (in-place) or different
 | |
| (out-of-place) if the plan was originally created to be in-place or
 | |
| out-of-place, respectively.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| For split arrays, the separations between the real and imaginary
 | |
| parts, @code{ii-ri} and @code{io-ro}, are the same as they were for
 | |
| the input and output arrays when the plan was created.  (This
 | |
| condition is automatically satisfied for interleaved arrays.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @item
 | |
| The @dfn{alignment} of the new input/output arrays is the same as that
 | |
| of the input/output arrays when the plan was created, unless the plan
 | |
| was created with the @code{FFTW_UNALIGNED} flag.
 | |
| @ctindex FFTW_UNALIGNED
 | |
| Here, the alignment is a platform-dependent quantity (for example, it is
 | |
| the address modulo 16 if SSE SIMD instructions are used, but the address
 | |
| modulo 4 for non-SIMD single-precision FFTW on the same machine).  In
 | |
| general, only arrays allocated with @code{fftw_malloc} are guaranteed to
 | |
| be equally aligned (@pxref{SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc}).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @end itemize
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex alignment
 | |
| The alignment issue is especially critical, because if you don't use
 | |
| @code{fftw_malloc} then you may have little control over the alignment
 | |
| of arrays in memory.  For example, neither the C++ @code{new} function
 | |
| nor the Fortran @code{allocate} statement provide strong enough
 | |
| guarantees about data alignment.  If you don't use @code{fftw_malloc},
 | |
| therefore, you probably have to use @code{FFTW_UNALIGNED} (which
 | |
| disables most SIMD support).  If possible, it is probably better for
 | |
| you to simply create multiple plans (creating a new plan is quick once
 | |
| one exists for a given size), or better yet re-use the same array for
 | |
| your transforms.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @findex fftw_alignment_of
 | |
| For rare circumstances in which you cannot control the alignment of
 | |
| allocated memory, but wish to determine where a given array is
 | |
| aligned like the original array for which a plan was created, you can
 | |
| use the @code{fftw_alignment_of} function:
 | |
| @example
 | |
| int fftw_alignment_of(double *p);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| Two arrays have equivalent alignment (for the purposes of applying a
 | |
| plan) if and only if @code{fftw_alignment_of} returns the same value
 | |
| for the corresponding pointers to their data (typecast to @code{double*} 
 | |
| if necessary).
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you are tempted to use the new-array execute interface because you
 | |
| want to transform a known bunch of arrays of the same size, you should
 | |
| probably go use the advanced interface instead (@pxref{Advanced
 | |
| Interface})).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The new-array execute functions are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| void fftw_execute_dft(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p, 
 | |
|      fftw_complex *in, fftw_complex *out);
 | |
| 
 | |
| void fftw_execute_split_dft(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p, 
 | |
|      double *ri, double *ii, double *ro, double *io);
 | |
| 
 | |
| void fftw_execute_dft_r2c(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p,
 | |
|      double *in, fftw_complex *out);
 | |
| 
 | |
| void fftw_execute_split_dft_r2c(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p,
 | |
|      double *in, double *ro, double *io);
 | |
| 
 | |
| void fftw_execute_dft_c2r(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p,
 | |
|      fftw_complex *in, double *out);
 | |
| 
 | |
| void fftw_execute_split_dft_c2r(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p,
 | |
|      double *ri, double *ii, double *out);
 | |
| 
 | |
| void fftw_execute_r2r(
 | |
|      const fftw_plan p, 
 | |
|      double *in, double *out);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_dft
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_split_dft
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_dft_r2c
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_split_dft_r2c
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_dft_c2r
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_split_dft_c2r
 | |
| @findex fftw_execute_r2r
 | |
| 
 | |
| These execute the @code{plan} to compute the corresponding transform on
 | |
| the input/output arrays specified by the subsequent arguments.  The
 | |
| input/output array arguments have the same meanings as the ones passed
 | |
| to the guru planner routines in the preceding sections.  The @code{plan}
 | |
| is not modified, and these routines can be called as many times as
 | |
| desired, or intermixed with calls to the ordinary @code{fftw_execute}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The @code{plan} @emph{must} have been created for the transform type
 | |
| corresponding to the execute function, e.g. it must be a complex-DFT
 | |
| plan for @code{fftw_execute_dft}.  Any of the planner routines for that
 | |
| transform type, from the basic to the guru interface, could have been
 | |
| used to create the plan, however.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| @node Wisdom, What FFTW Really Computes, New-array Execute Functions, FFTW Reference
 | |
| @section Wisdom
 | |
| @cindex wisdom
 | |
| @cindex saving plans to disk
 | |
| 
 | |
| This section documents the FFTW mechanism for saving and restoring
 | |
| plans from disk.  This mechanism is called @dfn{wisdom}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @menu
 | |
| * Wisdom Export::
 | |
| * Wisdom Import::
 | |
| * Forgetting Wisdom::
 | |
| * Wisdom Utilities::
 | |
| @end menu
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Wisdom Export, Wisdom Import, Wisdom, Wisdom
 | |
| @subsection Wisdom Export
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| int fftw_export_wisdom_to_filename(const char *filename);
 | |
| void fftw_export_wisdom_to_file(FILE *output_file);
 | |
| char *fftw_export_wisdom_to_string(void);
 | |
| void fftw_export_wisdom(void (*write_char)(char c, void *), void *data);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_export_wisdom
 | |
| @findex fftw_export_wisdom_to_filename
 | |
| @findex fftw_export_wisdom_to_file
 | |
| @findex fftw_export_wisdom_to_string
 | |
| 
 | |
| These functions allow you to export all currently accumulated wisdom
 | |
| in a form from which it can be later imported and restored, even
 | |
| during a separate run of the program. (@xref{Words of Wisdom-Saving
 | |
| Plans}.)  The current store of wisdom is not affected by calling any
 | |
| of these routines.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_export_wisdom} exports the wisdom to any output
 | |
| medium, as specified by the callback function
 | |
| @code{write_char}. @code{write_char} is a @code{putc}-like function that
 | |
| writes the character @code{c} to some output; its second parameter is
 | |
| the @code{data} pointer passed to @code{fftw_export_wisdom}.  For
 | |
| convenience, the following three ``wrapper'' routines are provided:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_export_wisdom_to_filename} writes wisdom to a file named
 | |
| @code{filename} (which is created or overwritten), returning @code{1}
 | |
| on success and @code{0} on failure.  A lower-level function, which
 | |
| requires you to open and close the file yourself (e.g. if you want to
 | |
| write wisdom to a portion of a larger file) is
 | |
| @code{fftw_export_wisdom_to_file}.  This writes the wisdom to the
 | |
| current position in @code{output_file}, which should be open with
 | |
| write permission; upon exit, the file remains open and is positioned
 | |
| at the end of the wisdom data.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_export_wisdom_to_string} returns a pointer to a
 | |
| @code{NULL}-terminated string holding the wisdom data. This string is
 | |
| dynamically allocated, and it is the responsibility of the caller to
 | |
| deallocate it with @code{free} when it is no longer needed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| All of these routines export the wisdom in the same format, which we
 | |
| will not document here except to say that it is LISP-like ASCII text
 | |
| that is insensitive to white space.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Wisdom Import, Forgetting Wisdom, Wisdom Export, Wisdom
 | |
| @subsection Wisdom Import
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| int fftw_import_system_wisdom(void);
 | |
| int fftw_import_wisdom_from_filename(const char *filename);
 | |
| int fftw_import_wisdom_from_string(const char *input_string);
 | |
| int fftw_import_wisdom(int (*read_char)(void *), void *data);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_import_wisdom
 | |
| @findex fftw_import_system_wisdom
 | |
| @findex fftw_import_wisdom_from_filename
 | |
| @findex fftw_import_wisdom_from_file
 | |
| @findex fftw_import_wisdom_from_string
 | |
| 
 | |
| These functions import wisdom into a program from data stored by the
 | |
| @code{fftw_export_wisdom} functions above. (@xref{Words of
 | |
| Wisdom-Saving Plans}.)  The imported wisdom replaces any wisdom
 | |
| already accumulated by the running program.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_import_wisdom} imports wisdom from any input medium, as
 | |
| specified by the callback function @code{read_char}. @code{read_char} is
 | |
| a @code{getc}-like function that returns the next character in the
 | |
| input; its parameter is the @code{data} pointer passed to
 | |
| @code{fftw_import_wisdom}. If the end of the input data is reached
 | |
| (which should never happen for valid data), @code{read_char} should
 | |
| return @code{EOF} (as defined in @code{<stdio.h>}).  For convenience,
 | |
| the following three ``wrapper'' routines are provided:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_import_wisdom_from_filename} reads wisdom from a file named
 | |
| @code{filename}.  A lower-level function, which requires you to open
 | |
| and close the file yourself (e.g. if you want to read wisdom from a
 | |
| portion of a larger file) is @code{fftw_import_wisdom_from_file}. This
 | |
| reads wisdom from the current position in @code{input_file} (which
 | |
| should be open with read permission); upon exit, the file remains
 | |
| open, but the position of the read pointer is unspecified.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_import_wisdom_from_string} reads wisdom from the
 | |
| @code{NULL}-terminated string @code{input_string}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @code{fftw_import_system_wisdom} reads wisdom from an
 | |
| implementation-defined standard file (@code{/etc/fftw/wisdom} on Unix
 | |
| and GNU systems).
 | |
| @cindex wisdom, system-wide
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The return value of these import routines is @code{1} if the wisdom was
 | |
| read successfully and @code{0} otherwise. Note that, in all of these
 | |
| functions, any data in the input stream past the end of the wisdom data
 | |
| is simply ignored.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Forgetting Wisdom, Wisdom Utilities, Wisdom Import, Wisdom
 | |
| @subsection Forgetting Wisdom
 | |
| 
 | |
| @example
 | |
| void fftw_forget_wisdom(void);
 | |
| @end example
 | |
| @findex fftw_forget_wisdom
 | |
| 
 | |
| Calling @code{fftw_forget_wisdom} causes all accumulated @code{wisdom}
 | |
| to be discarded and its associated memory to be freed. (New
 | |
| @code{wisdom} can still be gathered subsequently, however.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Wisdom Utilities,  , Forgetting Wisdom, Wisdom
 | |
| @subsection Wisdom Utilities
 | |
| 
 | |
| FFTW includes two standalone utility programs that deal with wisdom.  We
 | |
| merely summarize them here, since they come with their own @code{man}
 | |
| pages for Unix and GNU systems (with HTML versions on our web site).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The first program is @code{fftw-wisdom} (or @code{fftwf-wisdom} in
 | |
| single precision, etcetera), which can be used to create a wisdom file
 | |
| containing plans for any of the transform sizes and types supported by
 | |
| FFTW.  It is preferable to create wisdom directly from your executable
 | |
| (@pxref{Caveats in Using Wisdom}), but this program is useful for
 | |
| creating global wisdom files for @code{fftw_import_system_wisdom}.
 | |
| @cindex fftw-wisdom utility
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The second program is @code{fftw-wisdom-to-conf}, which takes a wisdom
 | |
| file as input and produces a @dfn{configuration routine} as output.  The
 | |
| latter is a C subroutine that you can compile and link into your
 | |
| program, replacing a routine of the same name in the FFTW library, that
 | |
| determines which parts of FFTW are callable by your program.
 | |
| @code{fftw-wisdom-to-conf} produces a configuration routine that links
 | |
| to only those parts of FFTW needed by the saved plans in the wisdom,
 | |
| greatly reducing the size of statically linked executables (which should
 | |
| only attempt to create plans corresponding to those in the wisdom,
 | |
| however).
 | |
| @cindex fftw-wisdom-to-conf utility
 | |
| @cindex configuration routines
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c ------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| @node What FFTW Really Computes,  , Wisdom, FFTW Reference
 | |
| @section What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| 
 | |
| In this section, we provide precise mathematical definitions for the
 | |
| transforms that FFTW computes.  These transform definitions are fairly
 | |
| standard, but some authors follow slightly different conventions for the
 | |
| normalization of the transform (the constant factor in front) and the
 | |
| sign of the complex exponent.  We begin by presenting the
 | |
| one-dimensional (1d) transform definitions, and then give the
 | |
| straightforward extension to multi-dimensional transforms.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @menu
 | |
| * The 1d Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT)::
 | |
| * The 1d Real-data DFT::
 | |
| * 1d Real-even DFTs (DCTs)::
 | |
| * 1d Real-odd DFTs (DSTs)::
 | |
| * 1d Discrete Hartley Transforms (DHTs)::
 | |
| * Multi-dimensional Transforms::
 | |
| @end menu
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node The 1d Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT), The 1d Real-data DFT, What FFTW Really Computes, What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| @subsection The 1d Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex discrete Fourier transform
 | |
| @cindex DFT
 | |
| The forward (@code{FFTW_FORWARD}) discrete Fourier transform (DFT) of a
 | |
| 1d complex array @math{X} of size @math{n} computes an array @math{Y},
 | |
| where:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = \sum_{j = 0}^{n - 1} X_j e^{-2\pi j k \sqrt{-1}/n} \ .
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @center Y[k] = sum for j = 0 to (n - 1) of X[j] * exp(-2 pi j k sqrt(-1)/n) .
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-dft.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| The backward (@code{FFTW_BACKWARD}) DFT computes:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = \sum_{j = 0}^{n - 1} X_j e^{2\pi j k \sqrt{-1}/n} \ .
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @center Y[k] = sum for j = 0 to (n - 1) of X[j] * exp(2 pi j k sqrt(-1)/n) .
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-idft.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| FFTW computes an unnormalized transform, in that there is no coefficient
 | |
| in front of the summation in the DFT.  In other words, applying the
 | |
| forward and then the backward transform will multiply the input by
 | |
| @math{n}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex frequency
 | |
| From above, an @code{FFTW_FORWARD} transform corresponds to a sign of
 | |
| @math{-1} in the exponent of the DFT.  Note also that we use the
 | |
| standard ``in-order'' output ordering---the @math{k}-th output
 | |
| corresponds to the frequency @math{k/n} (or @math{k/T}, where @math{T}
 | |
| is your total sampling period).  For those who like to think in terms of
 | |
| positive and negative frequencies, this means that the positive
 | |
| frequencies are stored in the first half of the output and the negative
 | |
| frequencies are stored in backwards order in the second half of the
 | |
| output.  (The frequency @math{-k/n} is the same as the frequency
 | |
| @math{(n-k)/n}.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node The 1d Real-data DFT, 1d Real-even DFTs (DCTs), The 1d Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT), What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| @subsection The 1d Real-data DFT
 | |
| 
 | |
| The real-input (r2c) DFT in FFTW computes the @emph{forward} transform
 | |
| @math{Y} of the size @code{n} real array @math{X}, exactly as defined
 | |
| above, i.e.
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = \sum_{j = 0}^{n - 1} X_j e^{-2\pi j k \sqrt{-1}/n} \ .
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @center Y[k] = sum for j = 0 to (n - 1) of X[j] * exp(-2 pi j k sqrt(-1)/n) .
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-dft.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| This output array @math{Y} can easily be shown to possess the
 | |
| ``Hermitian'' symmetry
 | |
| @cindex Hermitian
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y_k = Y_{n-k}^*$,
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = Y[n-k]*,
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y<sub>k</sub> = Y<sub>n-k</sub></i><sup>*</sup>,
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| where we take @math{Y} to be periodic so that
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y_n = Y_0$.
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[n] = Y[0].
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y<sub>n</sub> = Y</i><sub>0</sub>.
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| As a result of this symmetry, half of the output @math{Y} is redundant
 | |
| (being the complex conjugate of the other half), and so the 1d r2c
 | |
| transforms only output elements @math{0}@dots{}@math{n/2} of @math{Y}
 | |
| (@math{n/2+1} complex numbers), where the division by @math{2} is
 | |
| rounded down. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Moreover, the Hermitian symmetry implies that
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y_0$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[0]
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y</i><sub>0</sub>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| and, if @math{n} is even, the
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y_{n/2}$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[n/2]
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y</i><sub><i>n</i>/2</sub>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| element, are purely real.  So, for the @code{R2HC} r2r transform, the
 | |
| halfcomplex format does not store the imaginary parts of these elements.
 | |
| @cindex r2r
 | |
| @ctindex R2HC
 | |
| @cindex halfcomplex format
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The c2r and @code{H2RC} r2r transforms compute the backward DFT of the
 | |
| @emph{complex} array @math{X} with Hermitian symmetry, stored in the
 | |
| r2c/@code{R2HC} output formats, respectively, where the backward
 | |
| transform is defined exactly as for the complex case:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = \sum_{j = 0}^{n - 1} X_j e^{2\pi j k \sqrt{-1}/n} \ .
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @center Y[k] = sum for j = 0 to (n - 1) of X[j] * exp(2 pi j k sqrt(-1)/n) .
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-idft.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| The outputs @code{Y} of this transform can easily be seen to be purely
 | |
| real, and are stored as an array of real numbers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| Like FFTW's complex DFT, these transforms are unnormalized.  In other
 | |
| words, applying the real-to-complex (forward) and then the
 | |
| complex-to-real (backward) transform will multiply the input by
 | |
| @math{n}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node 1d Real-even DFTs (DCTs), 1d Real-odd DFTs (DSTs), The 1d Real-data DFT, What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| @subsection 1d Real-even DFTs (DCTs)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Real-even symmetry DFTs in FFTW are exactly equivalent to the unnormalized
 | |
| forward (and backward) DFTs as defined above, where the input array
 | |
| @math{X} of length @math{N} is purely real and is also @dfn{even} symmetry.  In
 | |
| this case, the output array is likewise real and even symmetry.
 | |
| @cindex real-even DFT
 | |
| @cindex REDFT
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @ctindex REDFT00
 | |
| For the case of @code{REDFT00}, this even symmetry means that
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $X_j = X_{N-j}$,
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| X[j] = X[N-j],
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>X<sub>j</sub> = X<sub>N-j</sub></i>,
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| where we take @math{X} to be periodic so that
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $X_N = X_0$.
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| X[N] = X[0].
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>X<sub>N</sub> = X</i><sub>0</sub>.
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| Because of this redundancy, only the first @math{n} real numbers are
 | |
| actually stored, where @math{N = 2(n-1)}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The proper definition of even symmetry for @code{REDFT10},
 | |
| @code{REDFT01}, and @code{REDFT11} transforms is somewhat more intricate
 | |
| because of the shifts by @math{1/2} of the input and/or output, although
 | |
| the corresponding boundary conditions are given in @ref{Real even/odd
 | |
| DFTs (cosine/sine transforms)}.  Because of the even symmetry, however,
 | |
| the sine terms in the DFT all cancel and the remaining cosine terms are
 | |
| written explicitly below.  This formulation often leads people to call
 | |
| such a transform a @dfn{discrete cosine transform} (DCT), although it is
 | |
| really just a special case of the DFT.
 | |
| @cindex discrete cosine transform
 | |
| @cindex DCT
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In each of the definitions below, we transform a real array @math{X} of
 | |
| length @math{n} to a real array @math{Y} of length @math{n}:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading REDFT00 (DCT-I)
 | |
| @ctindex REDFT00
 | |
| An @code{REDFT00} transform (type-I DCT) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = X_0 + (-1)^k X_{n-1}
 | |
|        + 2 \sum_{j=1}^{n-2} X_j \cos [ \pi j k / (n-1)].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = X[0] + (-1)^k X[n-1] + 2 (sum for j = 1 to n-2 of X[j] cos(pi jk /(n-1))).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-redft00.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| Note that this transform is not defined for @math{n=1}.  For @math{n=2},
 | |
| the summation term above is dropped as you might expect.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading REDFT10 (DCT-II)
 | |
| @ctindex REDFT10
 | |
| An @code{REDFT10} transform (type-II DCT, sometimes called ``the'' DCT) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = 2 \sum_{j=0}^{n-1} X_j \cos [\pi (j+1/2) k / n].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = 2 (sum for j = 0 to n-1 of X[j] cos(pi (j+1/2) k / n)).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-redft10.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading REDFT01 (DCT-III)
 | |
| @ctindex REDFT01
 | |
| An @code{REDFT01} transform (type-III DCT) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = X_0 + 2 \sum_{j=1}^{n-1} X_j \cos [\pi j (k+1/2) / n].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = X[0] + 2 (sum for j = 1 to n-1 of X[j] cos(pi j (k+1/2) / n)).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-redft01.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| In the case of @math{n=1}, this reduces to
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y_0 = X_0$.
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[0] = X[0].
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y</i><sub>0</sub> = <i>X</i><sub>0</sub>.
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| Up to a scale factor (see below), this is the inverse of @code{REDFT10} (``the'' DCT), and so the @code{REDFT01} (DCT-III) is sometimes called the ``IDCT''.
 | |
| @cindex IDCT
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading REDFT11 (DCT-IV)
 | |
| @ctindex REDFT11
 | |
| An @code{REDFT11} transform (type-IV DCT) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = 2 \sum_{j=0}^{n-1} X_j \cos [\pi (j+1/2) (k+1/2) / n].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = 2 (sum for j = 0 to n-1 of X[j] cos(pi (j+1/2) (k+1/2) / n)).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-redft11.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Inverses and Normalization
 | |
| 
 | |
| These definitions correspond directly to the unnormalized DFTs used
 | |
| elsewhere in FFTW (hence the factors of @math{2} in front of the
 | |
| summations).  The unnormalized inverse of @code{REDFT00} is
 | |
| @code{REDFT00}, of @code{REDFT10} is @code{REDFT01} and vice versa, and
 | |
| of @code{REDFT11} is @code{REDFT11}.  Each unnormalized inverse results
 | |
| in the original array multiplied by @math{N}, where @math{N} is the
 | |
| @emph{logical} DFT size.  For @code{REDFT00}, @math{N=2(n-1)} (note that
 | |
| @math{n=1} is not defined); otherwise, @math{N=2n}.
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In defining the discrete cosine transform, some authors also include
 | |
| additional factors of
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| sqrt(2)
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| √2
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $\sqrt{2}$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| (or its inverse) multiplying selected inputs and/or outputs.  This is a
 | |
| mostly cosmetic change that makes the transform orthogonal, but
 | |
| sacrifices the direct equivalence to a symmetric DFT.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node 1d Real-odd DFTs (DSTs), 1d Discrete Hartley Transforms (DHTs), 1d Real-even DFTs (DCTs), What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| @subsection 1d Real-odd DFTs (DSTs)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Real-odd symmetry DFTs in FFTW are exactly equivalent to the unnormalized
 | |
| forward (and backward) DFTs as defined above, where the input array
 | |
| @math{X} of length @math{N} is purely real and is also @dfn{odd} symmetry.  In
 | |
| this case, the output is odd symmetry and purely imaginary.
 | |
| @cindex real-odd DFT
 | |
| @cindex RODFT
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @ctindex RODFT00
 | |
| For the case of @code{RODFT00}, this odd symmetry means that
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $X_j = -X_{N-j}$,
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| X[j] = -X[N-j],
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>X<sub>j</sub> = -X<sub>N-j</sub></i>,
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| where we take @math{X} to be periodic so that
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $X_N = X_0$.
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| X[N] = X[0].
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>X<sub>N</sub> = X</i><sub>0</sub>.
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| Because of this redundancy, only the first @math{n} real numbers
 | |
| starting at @math{j=1} are actually stored (the @math{j=0} element is
 | |
| zero), where @math{N = 2(n+1)}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The proper definition of odd symmetry for @code{RODFT10},
 | |
| @code{RODFT01}, and @code{RODFT11} transforms is somewhat more intricate
 | |
| because of the shifts by @math{1/2} of the input and/or output, although
 | |
| the corresponding boundary conditions are given in @ref{Real even/odd
 | |
| DFTs (cosine/sine transforms)}.  Because of the odd symmetry, however,
 | |
| the cosine terms in the DFT all cancel and the remaining sine terms are
 | |
| written explicitly below.  This formulation often leads people to call
 | |
| such a transform a @dfn{discrete sine transform} (DST), although it is
 | |
| really just a special case of the DFT.
 | |
| @cindex discrete sine transform
 | |
| @cindex DST
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In each of the definitions below, we transform a real array @math{X} of
 | |
| length @math{n} to a real array @math{Y} of length @math{n}:
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading RODFT00 (DST-I)
 | |
| @ctindex RODFT00
 | |
| An @code{RODFT00} transform (type-I DST) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = 2 \sum_{j=0}^{n-1} X_j \sin [ \pi (j+1) (k+1) / (n+1)].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = 2 (sum for j = 0 to n-1 of X[j] sin(pi (j+1)(k+1) / (n+1))).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-rodft00.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading RODFT10 (DST-II)
 | |
| @ctindex RODFT10
 | |
| An @code{RODFT10} transform (type-II DST) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = 2 \sum_{j=0}^{n-1} X_j \sin [\pi (j+1/2) (k+1) / n].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = 2 (sum for j = 0 to n-1 of X[j] sin(pi (j+1/2) (k+1) / n)).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-rodft10.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading RODFT01 (DST-III)
 | |
| @ctindex RODFT01
 | |
| An @code{RODFT01} transform (type-III DST) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = (-1)^k X_{n-1} + 2 \sum_{j=0}^{n-2} X_j \sin [\pi (j+1) (k+1/2) / n].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = (-1)^k X[n-1] + 2 (sum for j = 0 to n-2 of X[j] sin(pi (j+1) (k+1/2) / n)).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-rodft01.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| In the case of @math{n=1}, this reduces to
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y_0 = X_0$.
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[0] = X[0].
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y</i><sub>0</sub> = <i>X</i><sub>0</sub>.
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading RODFT11 (DST-IV)
 | |
| @ctindex RODFT11
 | |
| An @code{RODFT11} transform (type-IV DST) in FFTW is defined by:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = 2 \sum_{j=0}^{n-1} X_j \sin [\pi (j+1/2) (k+1/2) / n].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k] = 2 (sum for j = 0 to n-1 of X[j] sin(pi (j+1/2) (k+1/2) / n)).
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-rodft11.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @subsubheading Inverses and Normalization
 | |
| 
 | |
| These definitions correspond directly to the unnormalized DFTs used
 | |
| elsewhere in FFTW (hence the factors of @math{2} in front of the
 | |
| summations).  The unnormalized inverse of @code{RODFT00} is
 | |
| @code{RODFT00}, of @code{RODFT10} is @code{RODFT01} and vice versa, and
 | |
| of @code{RODFT11} is @code{RODFT11}.  Each unnormalized inverse results
 | |
| in the original array multiplied by @math{N}, where @math{N} is the
 | |
| @emph{logical} DFT size.  For @code{RODFT00}, @math{N=2(n+1)};
 | |
| otherwise, @math{N=2n}.
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In defining the discrete sine transform, some authors also include
 | |
| additional factors of
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| sqrt(2)
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| √2
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $\sqrt{2}$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| (or its inverse) multiplying selected inputs and/or outputs.  This is a
 | |
| mostly cosmetic change that makes the transform orthogonal, but
 | |
| sacrifices the direct equivalence to an antisymmetric DFT.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node 1d Discrete Hartley Transforms (DHTs), Multi-dimensional Transforms, 1d Real-odd DFTs (DSTs), What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| @subsection 1d Discrete Hartley Transforms (DHTs)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex discrete Hartley transform
 | |
| @cindex DHT
 | |
| The discrete Hartley transform (DHT) of a 1d real array @math{X} of size
 | |
| @math{n} computes a real array @math{Y} of the same size, where:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y_k = \sum_{j = 0}^{n - 1} X_j [ \cos(2\pi j k / n) + \sin(2\pi j k / n)].
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| @center Y[k] = sum for j = 0 to (n - 1) of X[j] * [cos(2 pi j k / n) + sin(2 pi j k / n)].
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <center><img src="equation-dht.png" align="top">.</center>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex normalization
 | |
| FFTW computes an unnormalized transform, in that there is no coefficient
 | |
| in front of the summation in the DHT.  In other words, applying the
 | |
| transform twice (the DHT is its own inverse) will multiply the input by
 | |
| @math{n}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| @c =========>
 | |
| @node Multi-dimensional Transforms,  , 1d Discrete Hartley Transforms (DHTs), What FFTW Really Computes
 | |
| @subsection Multi-dimensional Transforms
 | |
| 
 | |
| The multi-dimensional transforms of FFTW, in general, compute simply the
 | |
| separable product of the given 1d transform along each dimension of the
 | |
| array.  Since each of these transforms is unnormalized, computing the
 | |
| forward followed by the backward/inverse multi-dimensional transform
 | |
| will result in the original array scaled by the product of the
 | |
| normalization factors for each dimension (e.g. the product of the
 | |
| dimension sizes, for a multi-dimensional DFT).
 | |
| 
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| As an explicit example, consider the following exact mathematical
 | |
| definition of our multi-dimensional DFT.  Let $X$ be a $d$-dimensional
 | |
| complex array whose elements are $X[j_1, j_2, \ldots, j_d]$, where $0
 | |
| \leq j_s < n_s$ for all~$s \in \{ 1, 2, \ldots, d \}$.  Let also
 | |
| $\omega_s = e^{2\pi \sqrt{-1}/n_s}$, for all ~$s \in \{ 1, 2, \ldots, d
 | |
| \}$.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The forward transform computes a complex array~$Y$, whose
 | |
| structure is the same as that of~$X$, defined by
 | |
| 
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y[k_1, k_2, \ldots, k_d] =
 | |
|     \sum_{j_1 = 0}^{n_1 - 1}
 | |
|         \sum_{j_2 = 0}^{n_2 - 1}
 | |
|            \cdots
 | |
|               \sum_{j_d = 0}^{n_d - 1}
 | |
|                   X[j_1, j_2, \ldots, j_d] 
 | |
|                       \omega_1^{-j_1 k_1}
 | |
|                       \omega_2^{-j_2 k_2}
 | |
|                       \cdots
 | |
|                       \omega_d^{-j_d k_d} \ .
 | |
| $$
 | |
| 
 | |
| The backward transform computes
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y[k_1, k_2, \ldots, k_d] =
 | |
|     \sum_{j_1 = 0}^{n_1 - 1}
 | |
|         \sum_{j_2 = 0}^{n_2 - 1}
 | |
|            \cdots
 | |
|               \sum_{j_d = 0}^{n_d - 1}
 | |
|                   X[j_1, j_2, \ldots, j_d] 
 | |
|                       \omega_1^{j_1 k_1}
 | |
|                       \omega_2^{j_2 k_2}
 | |
|                       \cdots
 | |
|                       \omega_d^{j_d k_d} \ .
 | |
| $$
 | |
| 
 | |
| Computing the forward transform followed by the backward transform
 | |
| will multiply the array by $\prod_{s=1}^{d} n_d$.
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| 
 | |
| @cindex r2c
 | |
| The definition of FFTW's multi-dimensional DFT of real data (r2c)
 | |
| deserves special attention.  In this case, we logically compute the full
 | |
| multi-dimensional DFT of the input data; since the input data are purely
 | |
| real, the output data have the Hermitian symmetry and therefore only one
 | |
| non-redundant half need be stored.  More specifically, for an @ndims multi-dimensional real-input DFT, the full (logical) complex output array
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $Y[k_0, k_1, \ldots, k_{d-1}]$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y</i>[<i>k</i><sub>0</sub>, <i>k</i><sub>1</sub>, ...,
 | |
| <i>k</i><sub><i>d-1</i></sub>]
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k[0], k[1], ..., k[d-1]]
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| has the symmetry:
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $$
 | |
| Y[k_0, k_1, \ldots, k_{d-1}] = Y[n_0 - k_0, n_1 - k_1, \ldots, n_{d-1} - k_{d-1}]^*
 | |
| $$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>Y</i>[<i>k</i><sub>0</sub>, <i>k</i><sub>1</sub>, ...,
 | |
| <i>k</i><sub><i>d-1</i></sub>] = <i>Y</i>[<i>n</i><sub>0</sub> -
 | |
| <i>k</i><sub>0</sub>, <i>n</i><sub>1</sub> - <i>k</i><sub>1</sub>, ...,
 | |
| <i>n</i><sub><i>d-1</i></sub> - <i>k</i><sub><i>d-1</i></sub>]<sup>*</sup>
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| Y[k[0], k[1], ..., k[d-1]] = Y[n[0] - k[0], n[1] - k[1], ..., n[d-1] - k[d-1]]*
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| (where each dimension is periodic).  Because of this symmetry, we only
 | |
| store the
 | |
| @tex
 | |
| $k_{d-1} = 0 \cdots n_{d-1}/2$
 | |
| @end tex
 | |
| @html
 | |
| <i>k</i><sub><i>d-1</i></sub> = 0...<i>n</i><sub><i>d-1</i></sub>/2+1
 | |
| @end html
 | |
| @ifinfo
 | |
| k[d-1] = 0...n[d-1]/2
 | |
| @end ifinfo
 | |
| elements of the @emph{last} dimension (division by @math{2} is rounded
 | |
| down).  (We could instead have cut any other dimension in half, but the
 | |
| last dimension proved computationally convenient.)  This results in the
 | |
| peculiar array format described in more detail by @ref{Real-data DFT
 | |
| Array Format}.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The multi-dimensional c2r transform is simply the unnormalized inverse
 | |
| of the r2c transform.  i.e. it is the same as FFTW's complex backward
 | |
| multi-dimensional DFT, operating on a Hermitian input array in the
 | |
| peculiar format mentioned above and outputting a real array (since the
 | |
| DFT output is purely real).
 | |
| 
 | |
| We should remind the user that the separable product of 1d transforms
 | |
| along each dimension, as computed by FFTW, is not always the same thing
 | |
| as the usual multi-dimensional transform.  A multi-dimensional
 | |
| @code{R2HC} (or @code{HC2R}) transform is not identical to the
 | |
| multi-dimensional DFT, requiring some post-processing to combine the
 | |
| requisite real and imaginary parts, as was described in @ref{The
 | |
| Halfcomplex-format DFT}.  Likewise, FFTW's multidimensional
 | |
| @code{FFTW_DHT} r2r transform is not the same thing as the logical
 | |
| multi-dimensional discrete Hartley transform defined in the literature,
 | |
| as discussed in @ref{The Discrete Hartley Transform}.
 | |
| 
 | 
