AI-generated Key Takeaways
- 
          The neqfunction returns 1 if the first value is not equal to the second, and 0 otherwise, on an element-wise basis for arrays.
- 
          The Array.neq(right)usage takes an array as the right-hand argument and returns an array.
- 
          Both the left ( this) and right (right) arguments are expected to be arrays.
| Usage | Returns | 
|---|---|
| Array.neq(right) | Array | 
| Argument | Type | Details | 
|---|---|---|
| this: left | Array | The left-hand value. | 
| right | Array | The right-hand value. | 
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
var empty = ee.Array([], ee.PixelType.int8()); print(empty.neq(empty)); // [] print(ee.Array([0]).neq(ee.Array([1]))); // 1 print(ee.Array([1]).neq(ee.Array([1]))); // 0 print(ee.Array([1.1]).neq(ee.Array([1.1]))); // 0 print(ee.Array([1.1]).float().neq(ee.Array([1.1]))); // 1 print(ee.Array([1.1]).double().neq(ee.Array([1.1]))); // 0 print(ee.Array([1]).int8().neq(ee.Array([1]))); // 0 print(ee.Array([1]).int8().neq(ee.Array([1]).int32())); // 0
import ee import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
empty = ee.Array([], ee.PixelType.int8()) display(empty.neq(empty)) # [] display(ee.Array([0]).neq(ee.Array([1]))) # 1 display(ee.Array([1]).neq(ee.Array([1]))) # 0 display(ee.Array([1.1]).neq(ee.Array([1.1]))) # 0 display(ee.Array([1.1]).float().neq(ee.Array([1.1]))) # 1 display(ee.Array([1.1]).double().neq(ee.Array([1.1]))) # 0 display(ee.Array([1]).int8().neq(ee.Array([1]))) # 0 display(ee.Array([1]).int8().neq(ee.Array([1]).int32())) # 0