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torch.fft.ifftn

torch.fft.ifftn(input, s=None, dim=None, norm=None, *, out=None)Tensor

Computes the N dimensional inverse discrete Fourier transform of input.

Note

Supports torch.half and torch.chalf on CUDA with GPU Architecture SM53 or greater. However it only supports powers of 2 signal length in every transformed dimensions.

Parameters
  • input (Tensor) – the input tensor

  • s (Tuple[int], optional) – Signal size in the transformed dimensions. If given, each dimension dim[i] will either be zero-padded or trimmed to the length s[i] before computing the IFFT. If a length -1 is specified, no padding is done in that dimension. Default: s = [input.size(d) for d in dim]

  • dim (Tuple[int], optional) – Dimensions to be transformed. Default: all dimensions, or the last len(s) dimensions if s is given.

  • norm (str, optional) –

    Normalization mode. For the backward transform (ifftn()), these correspond to:

    • "forward" - no normalization

    • "backward" - normalize by 1/n

    • "ortho" - normalize by 1/sqrt(n) (making the IFFT orthonormal)

    Where n = prod(s) is the logical IFFT size. Calling the forward transform (fftn()) with the same normalization mode will apply an overall normalization of 1/n between the two transforms. This is required to make ifftn() the exact inverse.

    Default is "backward" (normalize by 1/n).

Keyword Arguments

out (Tensor, optional) – the output tensor.

Example

>>> x = torch.rand(10, 10, dtype=torch.complex64)
>>> ifftn = torch.fft.ifftn(x)

The discrete Fourier transform is separable, so ifftn() here is equivalent to two one-dimensional ifft() calls:

>>> two_iffts = torch.fft.ifft(torch.fft.ifft(x, dim=0), dim=1)
>>> torch.testing.assert_close(ifftn, two_iffts, check_stride=False)

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