sequence.intersects(geometry) → sequence geometry.intersects(geometry) → bool r.intersects(sequence, geometry) → sequence r.intersects(geometry, geometry) → bool
Tests whether two geometry objects intersect with one another. When applied to a sequence of geometry objects, intersects
acts as a filter, returning a sequence of objects from the sequence that intersect with the argument.
Example: Is point2
within a 2000-meter circle around point1
?
> point1 = r.point(-117.220406, 32.719464) > point2 = r.point(-117.206201, 32.725186) > r.circle(point1, 2000).intersects(point2).run(conn) True
Example: Which of the locations in a list of parks intersect circle1
?
circle1 = r.circle([-117.220406, 32.719464], 10, unit='mi') r.table('parks')('area').intersects(circle1).run(conn)
The
intersects
command cannot take advantage of a geospatial secondary index. If you’re working with large data sets, you should consider using an index and the get_intersecting command instead ofintersects
.
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