Picking an FFT length

How could I find the most efficient FFT size greater than N? I know that with fftw "sizes that are products of small factors are transformed most efficiently". I also know that if N=1025, there is going to be a more efficient size than the next power of 2 which is 2048. But in general, what's the best way to find the right size for a given N?

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As far as time is concerned?
Test it and time it!

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 Accepted Answer

Greg Heath
Greg Heath on 21 Oct 2011

0 votes

Why not just overlay the times vs size plot for
X = fft(randn(N,M))
when M = 1e4 N1 = 2.^(1:10) % blue and N2 = floor(pi.^(1:6)) %red
or, pick your own sizes.
Hope this helps.
Greg

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on 21 Oct 2011

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