Hi Serban,
thanks a lot.
It's clear now, what I'll do tomorrow .-).
Best,
Philip
Am 16.11.2016 um 15:51 schrieb Serban
Maerean:
Apparently, there are
a few options, from
Java wrappers to the FFTW to native Java implementations of
FFTW:
http://www.fftw.org/download.html-> they mention 2 choices here, in
sections "Calling FFTW from
Other Languages"
https://sites.google.com/site/piotrwendykier/software/jtransforms-> this is a native implementation
of FFT in Java that is already used
by a few projects. (maybe your best bet)
http://carsomyr.github.io/shared/-> this is a more diversified
scientific package, but it mentions that
it provides multidimensional FFT operations backed by FFTW3.
Hope this helps.
Serban Maerean
HPC Tools
T/L: 293-9770, Tel.: 845-433-9770
E-mail: serban@xxxxxxxxxx
From:
Philip Wenig
<philip.wenig@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To:
Science Industry
Working
Group <science-iwg@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date:
11/16/2016 09:23 AM
Subject:
[science-iwg]
FFT Java Library
Sent by:
science-iwg-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx
Does anyone can recommend a good java-based
fast fourier
transformation
(FFT) library?
Best,
Philip
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Dr. Philip Wenig » Founder » philip.wenig@xxxxxxxxxxxxx » http://www.openchrom.net
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