-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi Nasi,
this has totally gotten out of hand. Please stop.
We still have no idea of what you're trying to do. We'd usually really
like to help you, but all help we offered so far was not really
welcomed by you *at all*.
> FFTW documentation is not h
On 01/24/2014 11:32 AM, Nasi wrote:
instead of helping, you like to embarrass me...
in my first email, I asked for a tutorial not a short reference.
Well, how about here:
http://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
And here:
http://gnuradio.org/redmine/projects/gnuradio/wiki/HowToUse
And here:
http:
you guys do not get at all what is in there. You are just confronting me, and
accusing me not being an expert.
If I agree on not being an expert, will anyone here be happier?
FFTW documentation is not helpful, you guys have been working on this for ages,
now you can't see the challenge in that
On 01/24/2014 09:55 AM, Nasi wrote:
Coder is a good coder if his code is readable first. Anyone one can design a
confusing language.
A programmers job in documentation isn't to teach you the language the
code is written in. It is assumed that the reader knows the language
already.
Imagine
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi Paul,
no. It does an FFT and nothing else (aside offering to apply a
window); please read the doxygen or have a look at the code. Both is
extremely short and to the point ;)
Anyway,
"file_sink binary files" are not something special. They just sto
Hi Nasi,
And the problem is in that input part. It is not clear what is inbuf...
> I create gr_complex vector and want to input it into fft. It does not work
> in any way. There are alot of questions are still open.
>
You can look at fft.cc and fft_vcc_fftw.cc. It is quite clear how the FFTW
li
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi Nasi,
Inbuf is the input buffer. It is a C++ pointer to a gr_complex.
That is the place where you put your input. As is described on the
doxygen page.
It is assumed that when you try to use a C++ framework, you are able
to understand basic C++ con
And the problem is in that input part. It is not clear what is inbuf...
I create gr_complex vector and want to input it into fft. It does not work in
any way. There are alot of questions are still open.
Coder is a good coder if his code is readable first. Anyone one can design a
confusing lan
Does the function referred to have the ability to read in a File Sink
binary file?
Paul B. Huter
On Jan 24, 2014 7:00 AM, "Martin Braun" wrote:
> On 01/24/2014 02:45 AM, Nasi wrote:
> > Thanks!
> >
> > with doxygen docs do you mean
> > these:
> http://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/classgr_1_1fft_1_1f
On 01/24/2014 02:45 AM, Nasi wrote:
> Thanks!
>
> with doxygen docs do you mean
> these: http://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/classgr_1_1fft_1_1fft__complex.html ?
> this redundant information is hopeless...
>
> Do you know any normal good mature documentation?
Nasi,
part of learning GNU Radio is le
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi Nasi,
On 24.01.2014 02:45, Nasi wrote:
> Thanks!
>
> with doxygen docs do you mean these:
> http://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/classgr_1_1fft_1_1fft__complex.html
> ?
Yes, basically that class. I was referring to the module as whole, and
was hoping yo
Check the FFTW documentation.
On Fri, Jan 24, 2014 at 12:45 PM, Nasi wrote:
> Thanks!
>
> with doxygen docs do you mean these:
> http://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/classgr_1_1fft_1_1fft__complex.html ?
> this redundant information is hopeless...
>
> Do you know any normal good mature documentation?
Thanks!
with doxygen docs do you mean these:
http://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/classgr_1_1fft_1_1fft__complex.html ?
this redundant information is hopeless...
Do you know any normal good mature documentation?
Четверг, 23 января 2014, 20:57 +01:00 от Marcus Müller :
>-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MES
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Yes, you can. Look into the gr-fft module documentation in the doxygen
docs.
Alternatively, you can simply link against FFTW [1] yourself and use
the FFT algorithms; gr-fft is a wrapper for that functionality
offering simplification and ease of use. Bu
Hi all,
I know there is an FFT block in gnuradio 3.7.
I want to create a cc file and add some gnuradio classes there.
Can I use FFT without .grc file without using blocks, just as a c++ function?
--
NE___
Discuss-gnuradio mailing list
Discuss-gnura
15 matches
Mail list logo