AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
Computes the largest integer less than or equal to the input number.
-
The
floor()method is used with a Number input and returns a Number output. -
Positive inputs return the integer part of the number.
-
Negative inputs return the next lower integer.
| Usage | Returns |
|---|---|
Number.
floor
()
|
Number |
| Argument | Type | Details |
|---|---|---|
|
this:
input
|
Number | The input value. |
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
// Positive numbers. print ( 'Floor for 2.1' , ee . Number ( 2.1 ). floor ()); // 2 print ( 'Floor for 2.5' , ee . Number ( 2.5 ). floor ()); // 2 print ( 'Floor for 2.9' , ee . Number ( 2.9 ). floor ()); // 2 // Negative numbers. print ( 'Floor for -2.1' , ee . Number ( - 2.1 ). floor ()); // -3 print ( 'Floor for -2.5' , ee . Number ( - 2.5 ). floor ()); // -3 print ( 'Floor for -2.9' , ee . Number ( - 2.9 ). floor ()); // -3
import ee import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
# Positive numbers. display ( 'Floor for 2.1:' , ee . Number ( 2.1 ) . floor ()) # 2 display ( 'Floor for 2.5:' , ee . Number ( 2.5 ) . floor ()) # 2 display ( 'Floor for 2.9:' , ee . Number ( 2.9 ) . floor ()) # 2 # Negative numbers. display ( 'Floor for -2.1:' , ee . Number ( - 2.1 ) . floor ()) # -3 display ( 'Floor for -2.5:' , ee . Number ( - 2.5 ) . floor ()) # -3 display ( 'Floor for -2.9:' , ee . Number ( - 2.9 ) . floor ()) # -3

