cf.DomainAxis.equals¶
-
DomainAxis.
equals
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Whether two domain axis constructs are the same.
Equality is strict by default. This means that:
the axis sizes must be the same.
Any type of object may be tested but, in general, equality is only possible with another domain axis construct, or a subclass of one. See the ignore_type parameter.
NetCDF elements, such as netCDF variable and dimension names, do not constitute part of the CF data model and so are not checked.
New in version (cfdm): 1.7.0
- Parameters
- other:
The object to compare for equality.
- verbose:
int
orstr
orNone
, optional If an integer from
-1
to3
, or an equivalent string equal ignoring case to one of:'DISABLE'
(0
)'WARNING'
(1
)'INFO'
(2
)'DETAIL'
(3
)'DEBUG'
(-1
)
set for the duration of the method call only as the minimum cut-off for the verboseness level of displayed output (log) messages, regardless of the globally-configured
cfdm.log_level
. Note that increasing numerical value corresponds to increasing verbosity, with the exception of-1
as a special case of maximal and extreme verbosity.Otherwise, if
None
(the default value), output messages will be shown according to the value of thecfdm.log_level
setting.Overall, the higher a non-negative integer or equivalent string that is set (up to a maximum of
3
/'DETAIL'
) for increasing verbosity, the more description that is printed to convey information about the operation.- ignore_type:
bool
, optional Any type of object may be tested but, in general, equality is only possible with another
DomainAxis
instance, or a subclass of one. If ignore_type is True thencfdm.DomainAxis(source=other)
is tested, rather than theother
defined by the other parameter.
- Returns
bool
Whether the two domain axis constructs are equal.
Examples:
>>> d.equals(d) True >>> d.equals(d.copy()) True >>> d.equals('not a domain axis') False
>>> d = cfdm.DomainAxis(1) >>> e = cfdm.DomainAxis(99) >>> d.equals(e, verbose=3) DomainAxis: Different axis sizes: 1 != 99 False