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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);
Plan a real-input (r2c) or real-output (c2r), multi-dimensional DFT with
transform dimensions given by (rank
, dims
) over a
multi-dimensional vector (loop) of dimensions (howmany_rank
,
howmany_dims
). dims
and howmany_dims
should point
to fftw_iodim
arrays of length rank
and
howmany_rank
, respectively. As for the basic and advanced
interfaces, an r2c transform is FFTW_FORWARD
and a c2r transform
is FFTW_BACKWARD
.
The last dimension of dims
is interpreted specially:
that dimension of the real array has size dims[rank-1].n
, but
that dimension of the complex array has size 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-NULL
) for
any dimensions other than those described in Real-data DFT Array Format and generalized in Advanced Real-data DFTs. (That is,
for an in-place transform, each individual dimension should be able to
operate in place.)
in
and out
point to the input and output arrays for r2c
and c2r transforms, respectively. For split arrays, ri
and
ii
point to the real and imaginary input arrays for a c2r
transform, and ro
and io
point to the real and imaginary
output arrays for an r2c transform. in
and ro
or
ri
and out
may be the same, indicating an in-place
transform. (In-place transforms where in
and io
or
ii
and out
are the same are not currently supported.)
flags
is a bitwise OR (‘|’) of zero or more planner flags,
as defined in Planner Flags.
In-place transforms of rank greater than 1 are currently only
supported for interleaved arrays. For split arrays, the planner will
return NULL
.
Next: Guru Real-to-real Transforms, Previous: Guru Complex DFTs, Up: Guru Interface [Contents][Index]