Combinatorial And (Spatial Analyst)

Summary

Performs a Combinatorial And operation on the cell values of two input rasters.

If both input values are true (non-zero), the output is a different value for each unique combination of input values. If one or both inputs are false (zero), the output value is 0.

Learn more about how Combinatorial tools work

Illustration

Combinatorial And illustration
OutRas = CombinatorialAnd(InRas1, InRas2)

Usage

Syntax

CombinatorialAnd (in_raster_or_constant1, in_raster_or_constant2)
ParameterExplanationData Type
in_raster_or_constant1

The first input to use in this combinatorial operation.

It must be of positive integer type.

A number can be used as an input for this parameter, provided a raster is specified for the other parameter. To be able to specify a number for both inputs, the cell size and extent must first be set in the environment.

Raster Layer | Constant
in_raster_or_constant2

The second input to use in this combinatorial operation.

It must be of positive integer type.

A number can be used as an input for this parameter, provided a raster is specified for the other parameter. To be able to specify a number for both inputs, the cell size and extent must first be set in the environment.

Raster Layer | Constant

Return Value

NameExplanationData Type
out_raster

The output raster.

Raster

Code Sample

CombinatorialAnd example 1 (Python window)

This example performs a Combinatorial And operation on two GRID rasters and outputs the result as a TIFF raster.

import arcpy
from arcpy import env
from arcpy.sa import *
env.workspace = "C:/sapyexamples/data"
outCAnd = CombinatorialAnd("degs", "cost")
outCAnd.save("C:/sapyexamples/output/outcand.tif")
CombinatorialAnd example 2 (stand-alone script)

This example performs a Combinatorial And operation on two GRID rasters.

# Name: CombinatorialAnd_Ex_02.py
# Description: Performs a Combinatorial And operation on the cell
#              values of two input rasters
# Requirements: Spatial Analyst Extension
# Author: ESRI

# Import system modules
import arcpy
from arcpy import env
from arcpy.sa import *

# Set environment settings
env.workspace = "C:/sapyexamples/data"

# Set local variables
inRaster1 = "degs"
inRaster2 = "cost"

# Check out the ArcGIS Spatial Analyst extension license
arcpy.CheckOutExtension("Spatial")

# Execute CombinatorialAnd
outCAnd = CombinatorialAnd(inRaster1, inRaster2)

# Save the output 
outCAnd.save("C:/sapyexamples/output/outcand")

Environments

Related Topics

Licensing Information

ArcView: Requires Spatial Analyst
ArcEditor: Requires Spatial Analyst
ArcInfo: Requires Spatial Analyst

6/29/2011