AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
The
toGeoJSONString()method returns a GeoJSON string representation of a geometry. -
The method can be applied to a
MultiPointobject and returns a string. -
The method takes the
Geometryinstance as an argument. -
Examples are provided for both JavaScript and Python.
| Usage | Returns |
|---|---|
MultiPoint.toGeoJSONString() | String |
| Argument | Type | Details |
|---|---|---|
this: geometry | Geometry | The Geometry instance. |
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
// Define a MultiPoint object. var multiPoint = ee.Geometry.MultiPoint([[-122.082, 37.420], [-122.081, 37.426]]); // Apply the toGeoJSONString method to the MultiPoint object. var multiPointToGeoJSONString = multiPoint.toGeoJSONString(); // Print the result to the console. print('multiPoint.toGeoJSONString(...) =', multiPointToGeoJSONString); // Display relevant geometries on the map. Map.setCenter(-122.085, 37.422, 15); Map.addLayer(multiPoint, {'color': 'black'}, 'Geometry [black]: multiPoint');
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 toGeoJSONString method to the MultiPoint object. multipoint_to_geojson_string = multipoint.toGeoJSONString() # Print the result. display('multipoint.toGeoJSONString(...) =', multipoint_to_geojson_string) # 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