AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
Returns the projection of a MultiLineString geometry.
-
The
projection()
method is used to obtain the projection information. -
The result is a Projection object representing the geometry's projection.
-
Usage example is provided in JavaScript, Python, and Colab environments.
Usage | Returns |
---|---|
MultiLineString.projection() | Projection |
Argument | Type | Details |
---|---|---|
this: geometry | Geometry |
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
// Define a MultiLineString object. var multiLineString = ee.Geometry.MultiLineString( [[[-122.088, 37.418], [-122.086, 37.422], [-122.082, 37.418]], [[-122.087, 37.416], [-122.083, 37.416], [-122.082, 37.419]]]); // Apply the projection method to the MultiLineString object. var multiLineStringProjection = multiLineString.projection(); // Print the result to the console. print('multiLineString.projection(...) =', multiLineStringProjection); // Display relevant geometries on the map. Map.setCenter(-122.085, 37.422, 15); Map.addLayer(multiLineString, {'color': 'black'}, 'Geometry [black]: multiLineString');
import ee import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
# Define a MultiLineString object. multilinestring = ee.Geometry.MultiLineString([ [[-122.088, 37.418], [-122.086, 37.422], [-122.082, 37.418]], [[-122.087, 37.416], [-122.083, 37.416], [-122.082, 37.419]], ]) # Apply the projection method to the MultiLineString object. multilinestring_projection = multilinestring.projection() # Print the result. display('multilinestring.projection(...) =', multilinestring_projection) # Display relevant geometries on the map. m = geemap.Map() m.set_center(-122.085, 37.422, 15) m.add_layer( multilinestring, {'color': 'black'}, 'Geometry [black]: multilinestring' ) m