Anuncio: Todos los proyectos no comerciales registrados para usar Earth Engine antes del
15 de abril de 2025 deben
verificar su elegibilidad no comercial para mantener el acceso a Earth Engine.
ee.Geometry.MultiPoint.geodesic
Organiza tus páginas con colecciones
Guarda y categoriza el contenido según tus preferencias.
Si es falso, los bordes son rectos en la proyección. Si es verdadero, los bordes se curvan para seguir la ruta más corta en la superficie de la Tierra.
Uso | Muestra |
---|
MultiPoint.geodesic() | Booleano |
Argumento | Tipo | Detalles |
---|
esta: geometry | Geometría | |
Ejemplos
Editor de código (JavaScript)
// Define a MultiPoint object.
var multiPoint = ee.Geometry.MultiPoint([[-122.082, 37.420], [-122.081, 37.426]]);
// Apply the geodesic method to the MultiPoint object.
var multiPointGeodesic = multiPoint.geodesic();
// Print the result to the console.
print('multiPoint.geodesic(...) =', multiPointGeodesic);
// Display relevant geometries on the map.
Map.setCenter(-122.085, 37.422, 15);
Map.addLayer(multiPoint,
{'color': 'black'},
'Geometry [black]: multiPoint');
Configuración de Python
Consulta la página
Entorno de Python para obtener información sobre la API de Python y el uso de geemap
para el desarrollo interactivo.
import ee
import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
# Define a MultiPoint object.
multipoint = ee.Geometry.MultiPoint([[-122.082, 37.420], [-122.081, 37.426]])
# Apply the geodesic method to the MultiPoint object.
multipoint_geodesic = multipoint.geodesic()
# Print the result.
display('multipoint.geodesic(...) =', multipoint_geodesic)
# Display relevant geometries on the map.
m = geemap.Map()
m.set_center(-122.085, 37.422, 15)
m.add_layer(multipoint, {'color': 'black'}, 'Geometry [black]: multipoint')
m
Salvo que se indique lo contrario, el contenido de esta página está sujeto a la licencia Atribución 4.0 de Creative Commons, y los ejemplos de código están sujetos a la licencia Apache 2.0. Para obtener más información, consulta las políticas del sitio de Google Developers. Java es una marca registrada de Oracle o sus afiliados.
Última actualización: 2025-07-26 (UTC)
[null,null,["Última actualización: 2025-07-26 (UTC)"],[[["\u003cp\u003eThe \u003ccode\u003egeodesic()\u003c/code\u003e method, when applied to a MultiPoint geometry, determines whether edges between points are rendered as straight lines or curved to follow the Earth's curvature.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eIt returns \u003ccode\u003etrue\u003c/code\u003e if edges are curved (geodesic) and \u003ccode\u003efalse\u003c/code\u003e if they are straight.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eThis method can be utilized to visualize and analyze MultiPoint data with accurate spatial representation on the Earth's surface.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eExamples are provided in JavaScript, Python setup and Python Colab environment for applying the \u003ccode\u003egeodesic()\u003c/code\u003e method.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],["The `geodesic()` method, applicable to a `MultiPoint` geometry, determines edge curvature in a projection. It returns a boolean value; `true` signifies curved edges along the Earth's surface's shortest paths, while `false` indicates straight edges. The method's argument is the `geometry` itself. Examples are given using JavaScript and Python, defining a `MultiPoint`, applying the method, printing the boolean result, and visualizing the geometry on a map.\n"],null,["# ee.Geometry.MultiPoint.geodesic\n\nIf false, edges are straight in the projection. If true, edges are curved to follow the shortest path on the surface of the Earth.\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n| Usage | Returns |\n|-------------------------|---------|\n| MultiPoint.geodesic`()` | Boolean |\n\n| Argument | Type | Details |\n|------------------|----------|---------|\n| this: `geometry` | Geometry | |\n\nExamples\n--------\n\n### Code Editor (JavaScript)\n\n```javascript\n// Define a MultiPoint object.\nvar multiPoint = ee.Geometry.MultiPoint([[-122.082, 37.420], [-122.081, 37.426]]);\n\n// Apply the geodesic method to the MultiPoint object.\nvar multiPointGeodesic = multiPoint.geodesic();\n\n// Print the result to the console.\nprint('multiPoint.geodesic(...) =', multiPointGeodesic);\n\n// Display relevant geometries on the map.\nMap.setCenter(-122.085, 37.422, 15);\nMap.addLayer(multiPoint,\n {'color': 'black'},\n 'Geometry [black]: multiPoint');\n```\nPython setup\n\nSee the [Python Environment](/earth-engine/guides/python_install) page for information on the Python API and using\n`geemap` for interactive development. \n\n```python\nimport ee\nimport geemap.core as geemap\n```\n\n### Colab (Python)\n\n```python\n# Define a MultiPoint object.\nmultipoint = ee.Geometry.MultiPoint([[-122.082, 37.420], [-122.081, 37.426]])\n\n# Apply the geodesic method to the MultiPoint object.\nmultipoint_geodesic = multipoint.geodesic()\n\n# Print the result.\ndisplay('multipoint.geodesic(...) =', multipoint_geodesic)\n\n# Display relevant geometries on the map.\nm = geemap.Map()\nm.set_center(-122.085, 37.422, 15)\nm.add_layer(multipoint, {'color': 'black'}, 'Geometry [black]: multipoint')\nm\n```"]]