cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: Dynamic Arrays in C-The Wrong Way - FFTW 3.3.3 cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95:
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3.2.5 Dynamic Arrays in C—The Wrong Way

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A different method for allocating multi-dimensional arrays in C is cannam@95: often suggested that is incompatible with FFTW: using it will cannam@95: cause FFTW to die a painful death. We discuss the technique here, cannam@95: however, because it is so commonly known and used. This method is to cannam@95: create arrays of pointers of arrays of pointers of ...etcetera. cannam@95: For example, the analogue in this method to the example above is: cannam@95: cannam@95:

     int i,j;
cannam@95:      fftw_complex ***a_bad_array;  /* another way to make a 5x12x27 array */
cannam@95:      
cannam@95:      a_bad_array = (fftw_complex ***) malloc(5 * sizeof(fftw_complex **));
cannam@95:      for (i = 0; i < 5; ++i) {
cannam@95:           a_bad_array[i] =
cannam@95:              (fftw_complex **) malloc(12 * sizeof(fftw_complex *));
cannam@95:           for (j = 0; j < 12; ++j)
cannam@95:                a_bad_array[i][j] =
cannam@95:                      (fftw_complex *) malloc(27 * sizeof(fftw_complex));
cannam@95:      }
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As you can see, this sort of array is inconvenient to allocate (and cannam@95: deallocate). On the other hand, it has the advantage that the cannam@95: (i,j,k)-th element can be referenced simply by cannam@95: a_bad_array[i][j][k]. cannam@95: cannam@95:

If you like this technique and want to maximize convenience in accessing cannam@95: the array, but still want to pass the array to FFTW, you can use a cannam@95: hybrid method. Allocate the array as one contiguous block, but also cannam@95: declare an array of arrays of pointers that point to appropriate places cannam@95: in the block. That sort of trick is beyond the scope of this cannam@95: documentation; for more information on multi-dimensional arrays in C, cannam@95: see the comp.lang.c cannam@95: FAQ. cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: cannam@95: