When using terra::writeRaster
, the maximum possible values allowed for writing depend on the datatype (INT1U
, INT2S
, INT2U
...).
The documentation tells that "When writing integer values the lowest available value (given the datatype) is used [to store NA
, I suppose] for signed types, and the highest value is used for unsigned values.". This should give the following range for unsigned types:
INT1U
: 0-254 (2^8-1, minus one for NA
storage)
INT2U
: 0-65,534 (2^16-1, minus one for NA
storage)
INT4U
: 0-4,294,967,294 (2^32-1, minus one for NA
storage)
However, for unsigned datatypes INT2U
and INT4U
, the maxima I observed on my machine do not fit these expectations:
INT2U
: 65,532
INT4U
: 4,294,967,292
Why this unexpected maximum values? I ask the question because it is not insignificant, for safe code writing, to exactly know these maximum values before writing files.
I am working under Windows 10. Here is a couple of code lines that I used to check:
library(terra)
terra version 1.3.4
Warning message:
package ‘terra’ was built under R version 4.0.5
r <- rast(ncols=1, nrows=2)
values(r) <- c(65532,65533)
writeRaster(r,"test.tif",wopt=list(datatype="INT2U"))
t <- rast("test.tif")
values(t)
lyr.1
[1,] 65532
[2,] NaN