ee.Array.not
On an element-wise basis, returns 0 if the input is non-zero, and 1 otherwise.
Usage | Returns |
---|
Array.not() | Array |
Argument | Type | Details |
---|
this: input | Array | The input array. |
Examples
var empty = ee.Array([], ee.PixelType.int8());
print(empty.not()); // []
print(ee.Array([0]).not()); // [1]
print(ee.Array([1]).not()); // [0]
print(ee.Array([-1, -0.1, 0, 0.1, 1]).not()); // [0,0,1,0,0]
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.Not()) # []
display(ee.Array([0]).Not()) # [1]
display(ee.Array([1]).Not()) # [0]
display(ee.Array([-1, -0.1, 0, 0.1, 1]).Not()) # [0, 0, 1, 0, 0]
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Last updated 2023-10-06 UTC.
[null,null,["Last updated 2023-10-06 UTC."],[[["The `Array.not()` function in Google Earth Engine returns an array with elements inverted logically: 1 for 0 input and 0 for any other input value."],["It operates element-wise on the input array, transforming each element based on its value."],["The function is available in both JavaScript and Python APIs of Earth Engine."],["Empty arrays remain empty after applying the `not()` function."]]],["The `not()` method, available for Arrays, checks each element. If an element is non-zero, it's replaced with 0; otherwise, it becomes 1. The method operates element-wise on the input array and returns a new array of the same dimensions. It handles various input values, including negative numbers, decimals, and empty arrays, and works in both JavaScript and Python environments. The output array is a transformed version of the original input array.\n"]]