AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
Number.multiply()
multiplies two numbers, taking a right-hand number as an argument and the initial number as the left-hand value. -
The function returns the product of the two numbers as a Number type.
-
It works with both positive and negative numbers, as well as with decimals.
-
Examples are provided in JavaScript and Python for using
Number.multiply()
.
Usage | Returns |
---|---|
Number.multiply(right) | Number |
Argument | Type | Details |
---|---|---|
this: left | Number | The left-hand value. |
right | Number | The right-hand value. |
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
print('5 * 10', ee.Number(5).multiply(ee.Number(10))); // 50 print('-5 * -10', ee.Number(-5).multiply(ee.Number(-10))); // 50 print('5 * 10.5', ee.Number(5).multiply(ee.Number(10.5))); // 52.5 print('5 * -10.5', ee.Number(5).multiply(ee.Number(-10.5))); // -52.5 print('0 * 10', ee.Number(0).multiply(ee.Number(10))); // 0
import ee import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
print('5 * 10:', ee.Number(5).multiply(ee.Number(10)).getInfo()) # 50 print('-5 * -10:', ee.Number(-5).multiply(ee.Number(-10)).getInfo()) # 50 print('5 * 10.5:', ee.Number(5).multiply(ee.Number(10.5)).getInfo()) # 52.5 print('5 * -10.5:', ee.Number(5).multiply(ee.Number(-10.5)).getInfo()) # -52.5 print('0 * 10:', ee.Number(0).multiply(ee.Number(10)).getInfo()) # 0