AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
The
Number.erfInv()method computes the inverse error function of a given input number. -
It takes a single argument, which is the number for which to compute the inverse error function.
-
The method returns a Number representing the result of the inverse error function computation.
-
Examples demonstrate calculating the inverse error function for values like -1, -0.001, 0, 0.001, and 1, yielding results such as -Infinity, -0.000886227, 0, 0.000886227, and Infinity respectively.
| Usage | Returns |
|---|---|
Number.erfInv() | Number |
| Argument | Type | Details |
|---|---|---|
this: input | Number | The input value. |
Examples
Code Editor (JavaScript)
print('Inverse error function of -1', ee.Number(-1).erfInv()); // -Infinity print('Inverse error function of -0.001', ee.Number(-0.001).erfInv()); // -0.000886227 print('Inverse error function of 0', ee.Number(0).erfInv()); // 0 print('Inverse error function of 0.001', ee.Number(0.001).erfInv()); // 0.000886227 print('Inverse error function of 1', ee.Number(1).erfInv()); // Infinity
import ee import geemap.core as geemap
Colab (Python)
print('Inverse error function of -1:', ee.Number(-1).erfInv().getInfo()) # -Infinity print('Inverse error function of -0.001:', ee.Number(-0.001).erfInv().getInfo()) # -0.000886227 print('Inverse error function of 0:', ee.Number(0).erfInv().getInfo()) # 0 print('Inverse error function of 0.001:', ee.Number(0.001).erfInv().getInfo()) # 0.000886227 print('Inverse error function of 1:', ee.Number(1).erfInv().getInfo()) # Infinity