cf.CoordinateBounds.cos¶
-
CoordinateBounds.
cos
(i=False)[source]¶ Take the trigonometric cosine of the data array.
Units are accounted for in the calculation, so that the the cosine of 90 degrees_east is 0.0, as is the cosine of 1.57079632 radians. If the units are not equivalent to radians (such as Kelvin) then they are treated as if they were radians.
The output units are ‘1’ (nondimensionsal).
See also
sin
,tan
Examples 1: >>> g = f.cos()
Parameters: - i : bool, optional
If True then update the coordinate bounds in place. By default a new coordinate bounds is created. In either case, a coordinate bounds is returned.
Returns: - out : cf.CoordinateBounds
The coordinate bounds with the cosine of data array values.
Examples 2: >>> f.Units <CF Units: degrees_east> >>> print f.array [[-90 0 90 --]] >>> f.cos() >>> f.Units <CF Units: 1> >>> print f.array [[0.0 1.0 0.0 --]]
>>> f.Units <CF Units: m s-1> >>> print f.array [[1 2 3 --]] >>> f.cos() >>> f.Units <CF Units: 1> >>> print f.array [[0.540302305868 -0.416146836547 -0.9899924966 --]]