AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
The
isUnbounded()method on a geometry object returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is unbounded. -
The method does not take any arguments.
-
The examples demonstrate applying
isUnbounded()to a BBox geometry in both JavaScript and Python.
| Usage | Returns |
|---|---|
BBox.
isUnbounded
()
|
Boolean |
| Argument | Type | Details |
|---|---|---|
|
this:
geometry
|
Geometry |
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
// Define a BBox object. var bBox = ee . Geometry . BBox ( - 122.09 , 37.42 , - 122.08 , 37.43 ); // Apply the isUnbounded method to the BBox object. var bBoxIsUnbounded = bBox . isUnbounded (); // Print the result to the console. print ( 'bBox.isUnbounded(...) =' , bBoxIsUnbounded ); // Display relevant geometries on the map. Map . setCenter ( - 122.085 , 37.422 , 15 ); Map . addLayer ( bBox , { 'color' : 'black' }, 'Geometry [black]: bBox' );
import ee import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
# Define a BBox object. bbox = ee . Geometry . BBox ( - 122.09 , 37.42 , - 122.08 , 37.43 ) # Apply the isUnbounded method to the BBox object. bbox_is_unbounded = bbox . isUnbounded () # Print the result. display ( 'bbox.isUnbounded(...) =' , bbox_is_unbounded ) # Display relevant geometries on the map. m = geemap . Map () m . set_center ( - 122.085 , 37.422 , 15 ) m . add_layer ( bbox , { 'color' : 'black' }, 'Geometry [black]: bbox' ) m

