Is there a way to multiply 2 polynomials with complex coefficients by using only 1 FFT and 1 inverse FFT?
# | User | Rating |
---|---|---|
1 | tourist | 3856 |
2 | jiangly | 3747 |
3 | orzdevinwang | 3706 |
4 | jqdai0815 | 3682 |
5 | ksun48 | 3591 |
6 | gamegame | 3477 |
7 | Benq | 3468 |
8 | Radewoosh | 3462 |
9 | ecnerwala | 3451 |
10 | heuristica | 3431 |
# | User | Contrib. |
---|---|---|
1 | cry | 167 |
2 | -is-this-fft- | 162 |
3 | Dominater069 | 160 |
4 | Um_nik | 158 |
5 | atcoder_official | 156 |
6 | Qingyu | 155 |
7 | djm03178 | 152 |
7 | adamant | 152 |
9 | luogu_official | 150 |
10 | awoo | 147 |
Is there a way to multiply 2 polynomials with complex coefficients by using only 1 FFT and 1 inverse FFT?
Name |
---|
If you want to calc $$$f(x) * g(x)$$$, you can simply calc $$$(f(x) + g(x)i)^2=f(x)^2 - g(x)^2 +2f(x)g(x)i$$$.
How does that help? f(x)^2-g(x)^2 doesn't have to be real, so how would you extract that part and the part f(x)g(x)? Secondly, squaring is also a multiplication, so your oracle for multiplication uses multiplication...
Squaring can be done in one FFT and one IFFT.
I think that what Rosetxdy means is that if f(x) and g(x) have real coefficients, you can construct (f(x)+ig(x)), square it, and extract the complex part for the answer. I'm not aware of any method to multiply polynomials with non-real coefficients in only 1 FFT and IFFT.
This's my ancient code.:)
Isn't $$$(f(x) + g(x)i)^2 = f(x)^2 - g(x)^2 + 2f(x)g(x)i$$$? I plugged into wolfram alpha :clown:
fixed the typo