ee.Array.lte
On an element-wise basis, returns 1 if and only if the first value is less than or equal to the second.
Usage | Returns |
---|
Array.lte(right) | Array |
Argument | Type | Details |
---|
this: left | Array | The left-hand value. |
right | Array | The right-hand value. |
Examples
var empty = ee.Array([], ee.PixelType.int8());
print(empty.lte(empty)); // []
print(ee.Array([0]).lte([0])); // [1]
print(ee.Array([1]).lte([2])); // [1]
print(ee.Array([2]).lte([1])); // [0]
print(ee.Array([-1, 0, 1]).lte([-2, 1, 1])); // [0,1,1]
Python setup
See the
Python Environment page for information on the Python API and using
geemap
for interactive development.
import ee
import geemap.core as geemap
empty = ee.Array([], ee.PixelType.int8())
display(empty.lte(empty)) # []
display(ee.Array([0]).lte([0])) # [1]
display(ee.Array([1]).lte([2])) # [1]
display(ee.Array([2]).lte([1])) # [0]
display(ee.Array([-1, 0, 1]).lte([-2, 1, 1])) # [0, 1, 1]
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Last updated 2023-12-06 UTC.
[null,null,["Last updated 2023-12-06 UTC."],[[["`Array.lte()` is an Earth Engine function that performs an element-wise comparison of two arrays, returning 1 if the element in the first array is less than or equal to the corresponding element in the second array, and 0 otherwise."],["The function takes two arguments: the left-hand array (`left`) and the right-hand array (`right`), and returns a new array with the results of the comparison."],["If either input array is empty, an empty array is returned."],["This function can be used in both JavaScript and Python environments within the Google Earth Engine platform."]]],[]]