Coding Best Practices

This doc describes coding practices that are intended to maximize the chance of success for complex or expensive Earth Engine computations. The methods described here are applicable to both interactive (e.g. Code Editor) and batch (Export) computations, though generally long running computations should be run in the batch system.

Avoid mixing client functions and objects with server functions and objects

Earth Engine server objects are objects with constructors that start with ee (e.g. ee.Image, ee.Reducer) and any methods on such objects are server functions. Any object not constructed in this manner is a client object. Client objects may come from the Code Editor (e.g. Map, Chart) or the JavaScript language (e.g. Date, Math, [], {}).

To avoid unintended behavior, do not mix client and server functions in your script as discussed here and here and here. See this page and/or this tutorial for in-depth explanation of client vs. server in Earth Engine. The following example illustrates the dangers of mixing client and server functionality:

Error — this code doesn't work!

var table = ee.FeatureCollection('USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017');

// Won't work.
for(var i=0; i<table.size(); i++) {
  print('No!');
}

Can you spot the error? Note that table.size() is a server method on a server object and can not be used with client-side functionality such as the < conditional.

A situation in which you may want to use for-loops is with UI setup, since Code Editor ui objects and methods are client-side. (Learn more about creating user interfaces in Earth Engine). For example:

Use client functions for UI setup.

var panel = ui.Panel();
for(var i=1; i<8; i++) {
  panel.widgets().set(i, ui.Button('button ' + i))
}
print(panel);

Conversely, map() is a server function and client functionality won't work inside the function passed to map(). For example:

Error — this code doesn't work!

var table = ee.FeatureCollection('USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017');

// Error:
var foobar = table.map(function(f) {
  print(f); // Can't use a client function here.
  // Can't Export, either.
});

To do something to every element in a collection, map() a function over the collection and set() a property:

Use map() and set()!

var table = ee.FeatureCollection('USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017');
print(table.first());

// Do something to every element of a collection.
var withMoreProperties = table.map(function(f) {
  // Set a property.
  return f.set('area_sq_meters', f.area())
});
print(withMoreProperties.first());

You can also filter() the collection based on computed or existing properties and print() the result. Note that you can not print a collection with more 5000 elements. If you get the "Collection query aborted after accumulating over 5000 elements" error, filter() or limit() the collection before printing.

Avoid converting to list unnecessarily

Collections in Earth Engine are processed using optimizations that are broken by converting the collection to a List or Array type. Unless you need random access to collection elements (i.e. you need to get the i'th element of a collection), use filters on the collection to access individual collection elements. The following example illustrates the difference between type conversion (not recommended) and filtering (recommended) to access an element in a collection:

Don't convert to list unnecessarily!

var table = ee.FeatureCollection('USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017');

// Do NOT do this!!
var list = table.toList(table.size());
print(list.get(13)); // User memory limit exceeded.

Note that you can easily trigger errors by converting a collection to a list unnecessesarily. The safer way is to use filter():

Use filter()!

print(table.filter(ee.Filter.eq('country_na', 'Niger')).first());

Note that you should use filters as early as possible in your analysis.

Avoid ee.Algorithms.If()

Do not use ee.Algorithms.If() to implement branching logic, especially in a mapped function. As the following example illustrates, ee.Algorithms.If() can be memory intensive and is not recommended:

Don't use If()!

var table = ee.FeatureCollection('USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017');

// Do NOT do this!
var veryBad = table.map(function(f) {
  return ee.Algorithms.If({
    condition: ee.String(f.get('country_na')).compareTo('Chad').gt(0),
    trueCase: f,      // Do something.
    falseCase: null   // Do something else.
  });
}, true);
print(veryBad); // User memory limit exceeded.

// If() may evaluate both the true and false cases.

Note that the second argument to map() is true. This means that the mapped function may return nulls and they will be dropped in the resultant collection. That can be useful (without If()), but here the easiest solution is to use a filter:

Use filter()!

print(table.filter(ee.Filter.eq('country_na', 'Chad')));

As shown in this tutorial, a functional programming approach using filters is the correct way to apply one logic to some elements of a collection and another logic to the other elements of the collection.

Avoid reproject()

Don't use reproject unless absolutely necessary. One reason you might want to use reproject() is to force Code Editor computations to happen at a specific scale so you can examine the results at your desired scale of analysis. In the next example, patches of hot pixels are computed and the count of pixels in each patch is computed. Run the example and click on one of the patches. Note that the count of pixels differs between the reprojected data the data that has not been reprojected.

var l8sr = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_SR');
var sf = ee.Geometry.Point([-122.405, 37.786]);
Map.centerObject(sf, 13);

// A reason to reproject - counting pixels and exploring interactively.
var image = l8sr.filterBounds(sf)
    .filterDate('2019-06-01', '2019-12-31')
    .first();
Map.addLayer(image, {bands: ['B10'], min: 2800, max: 3100}, 'image');

var hotspots = image.select('B10').gt(3100)
  .selfMask()
  .rename('hotspots');
var objectSize = hotspots.connectedPixelCount(256);

Map.addLayer(objectSize, {min: 1, max: 256}, 'Size No Reproject', false);

// Beware of reproject!  Don't zoom out on reprojected data.
var reprojected = objectSize.reproject(hotspots.projection());
Map.addLayer(reprojected, {min: 1, max: 256}, 'Size Reproject', false);

The reason for the discrepancy is because the scale of analysis is set by the Code Editor zoom level. By calling reproject() you set the scale of the computation instead of the Code Editor. Use reproject() with extreme caution for reasons described in this doc.

Filter and select() first

In general, filter input collections by time, location and/or metadata prior to doing anything else with the collection. Apply more selective filters before less selective filters. Spatial and/or temporal filters are often more selective. For example, note that select() and filter() are applied before map():

var images = ee.ImageCollection('COPERNICUS/S2_SR');
var sf = ee.Geometry.Point([-122.463, 37.768]);

// Expensive function to reduce the neighborhood of an image.
var reduceFunction = function(image) {
  return image.reduceNeighborhood({
    reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
    kernel: ee.Kernel.square(4)
  });
};

var bands = ['B4', 'B3', 'B2'];
// Select and filter first!
var reasonableComputation = images
    .select(bands)
    .filterBounds(sf)
    .filterDate('2018-01-01', '2019-02-01')
    .filter(ee.Filter.lt('CLOUDY_PIXEL_PERCENTAGE', 1))
    .aside(print) // Useful for debugging.
    .map(reduceFunction)
    .reduce('mean')
    .rename(bands);
var viz = {bands: bands, min: 0, max: 10000};
Map.addLayer(reasonableComputation, viz, 'resonableComputation');

Use updateMask() instead of mask()

The difference between updateMask() and mask() is that the former does a logical and() of the argument (the new mask) and the existing image mask whereas mask() simply replaces the image mask with the argument. The danger of the latter is that you can unmask pixels unintentionally. In this example, the goal is to mask pixels less than or equal to 300 meters elevation. As you can see (zoom out), using mask() causes a lot of pixels to become unmasked, pixels that don't belong in the image of interest:

var l8sr = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_SR');
var sf = ee.Geometry.Point([-122.40554461769182, 37.786807309873716]);
var aw3d30 = ee.Image('JAXA/ALOS/AW3D30_V1_1');

Map.centerObject(sf, 7);

var image = l8sr.filterBounds(sf)
    .filterDate('2019-06-01', '2019-12-31')
    .first();
var vis = {bands: ['B4', 'B3', 'B2'], min: 0, max: 3000};
Map.addLayer(image, vis, 'image', false);

var mask = aw3d30.select('AVE').gt(300);
Map.addLayer(mask, {}, 'mask', false);

// NO!  Don't do this!
var badMask = image.mask(mask);
Map.addLayer(badMask, vis, 'badMask');

var goodMask = image.updateMask(mask);
Map.addLayer(goodMask, vis, 'goodMask', false);

Combine reducers

If you need multiple statistics (e.g. mean and standard deviation) from a single input (e.g. an image region), it is more efficient to combine reducers. For example, to get image statistics, combine reducers as follows:

var image = ee.Image('COPERNICUS/S2/20150821T111616_20160314T094808_T30UWU');

// Get mean and SD in every band by combining reducers.
var stats = image.reduceRegion({
  reducer: ee.Reducer.mean().combine({
    reducer2: ee.Reducer.stdDev(),
    sharedInputs: true
  }),
  geometry: ee.Geometry.Rectangle([-2.15, 48.55, -1.83, 48.72]),
  scale: 10,
  bestEffort: true // Use maxPixels if you care about scale.
});

print(stats);

// Extract means and SDs to images.
var meansImage = stats.toImage().select('.*_mean');
var sdsImage = stats.toImage().select('.*_stdDev');

In this example, note that the mean reducer is combined with the standard deviation reducer and sharedInputs is true to enable a single pass through the input pixels. In the output dictionary, the name of the reducer is appended to the band name. To get mean and SD images (for example to normalize the input image), you can turn the values into an image and use regexes to extract means and SDs individually as demonstrated in the example.

Use Export

For computations that result in "User memory limit exceeded" or "Computation timed out" errors in the Code Editor, the same computations may be able to succeed by using Export. This is because the timeouts are longer and the allowable memory footprint is larger when running in the batch system (where exports run). (There are other approaches you may want to try first as detailed in the debugging doc). Continuing the previous example, suppose that dictionary returned an error. You could obtain the results by doing something like:

var link = '86836482971a35a5e735a17e93c23272';
Export.table.toDrive({
  collection: ee.FeatureCollection([ee.Feature(null, stats)]),
  description: 'exported_stats_demo_' + link,
  fileFormat: 'CSV'
});

Note that the link is embedded into the asset name, for reproducibility. Also note that if you want to export toAsset, you will need to supply a geometry, which can be anything, for example the image centroid, which is small and cheap to compute. (i.e. don't use a complex geometry if you don't need it).

See the debugging page for examples of using Export to resolve Computation timed out and Too many concurrent aggregations. See this doc for details on exporting in general.

If you don't need to clip, don't use clip()

Using clip() unnecessarily will increase computation time. Avoid clip() unless it's necessary to your analysis. If you're not sure, don't clip. An example of a bad use of clip:

Don't clip inputs unnecessarily!

var table = ee.FeatureCollection('USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017');
var l8sr = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_SR');

var chad = table.filter(ee.Filter.eq('country_na', 'Chad')).first();

// Do NOT clip unless you need to.
var unnecessaryClip = l8sr
    .select('B4')                           // Good.
    .filterBounds(chad.geometry())          // Good.
    .filterDate('2019-01-01', '2019-12-31') // Good.
    .map(function(image) {
      return image.clip(chad.geometry());   // NO! Bad! Not necessary.
    })
    .median()
    .reduceRegion({
      reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
      geometry: chad.geometry(),
      scale: 30,
      maxPixels: 1e10,
    });
print(unnecessaryClip);

Clipping the input images can be skipped entirely, because the region is specified in the reduceRegion() call:

Specify the region for the output!

var noClipNeeded = l8sr
    .select('B4')                           // Good.
    .filterBounds(chad.geometry())          // Good.
    .filterDate('2019-01-01', '2019-12-31') // Good.
    .median()
    .reduceRegion({
      reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
      geometry: chad.geometry(), // Geometry is specified here.
      scale: 30,
      maxPixels: 1e10,
    });
print(noClipNeeded);

If this computation times out, Export it as in this example.

If you need to clip with a complex collection, use clipToCollection()

If you really need to clip something, and the geometries you want to use for clipping are in a collection, use clipToCollection():

var ecoregions = ee.FeatureCollection('RESOLVE/ECOREGIONS/2017');
var image = ee.Image('JAXA/ALOS/AW3D30_V1_1');

var complexCollection = ecoregions
    .filter(ee.Filter.eq('BIOME_NAME',
                         'Tropical & Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forests'));
Map.addLayer(complexCollection, {}, 'complexCollection');

var clippedTheRightWay = image.select('AVE')
    .clipToCollection(complexCollection);
Map.addLayer(clippedTheRightWay, {}, 'clippedTheRightWay', false);

Do NOT use featureCollection.geometry() or featureCollection.union() on large and/or complex collections, which can be more memory intensive.

Don't use a complex collection as the region for a reducer

If you need to do a spatial reduction such that the reducer pools inputs from multiple regions in a FeatureCollection, don't supply featureCollection.geometry() as the geometry input to the reducer. Instead, use clipToCollection() and a region large enough to encompass the bounds of the collection. For example:

var ecoregions = ee.FeatureCollection('RESOLVE/ECOREGIONS/2017');
var image = ee.Image('JAXA/ALOS/AW3D30_V1_1');

var complexCollection = ecoregions
    .filter(ee.Filter.eq('BIOME_NAME', 'Tropical & Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forests'));

var clippedTheRightWay = image.select('AVE')
    .clipToCollection(complexCollection);
Map.addLayer(clippedTheRightWay, {}, 'clippedTheRightWay');

var reduction = clippedTheRightWay.reduceRegion({
  reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
  geometry: ee.Geometry.Rectangle({
    coords: [-179.9, -50, 179.9, 50],  // Almost global.
    geodesic: false
  }),
  scale: 30,
  maxPixels: 1e12
});
print(reduction); // If this times out, export it.

Use a non-zero errorMargin

For possibly expensive geometry operations, use the largest error margin possible given the required precision of the computation. The error margin specifies the maximum allowable error (in meters) permitted during operations on geometries (e.g. during reprojection). Specifying a small error margin can result in the need to densify geometries (with coordinates), which can be memory intensive. It's good practice to specify as large an error margin as possible for your computation:

var ecoregions = ee.FeatureCollection('RESOLVE/ECOREGIONS/2017');

var complexCollection = ecoregions.limit(10);
Map.centerObject(complexCollection);
Map.addLayer(complexCollection);

var expensiveOps = complexCollection.map(function(f) {
  return f.buffer(10000, 200).bounds(200);
});
Map.addLayer(expensiveOps, {}, 'expensiveOps');

Don't use a ridiculously small scale with reduceToVectors()

If you want to convert a raster to a vector, use an appropriate scale. Specifying a very small scale can substantially increase computation cost. Set scale as high as possible give the required precision. For example, to get polygons representing global land masses:

var etopo = ee.Image('NOAA/NGDC/ETOPO1');

// Approximate land boundary.
var bounds = etopo.select(0).gt(-100);

// Non-geodesic polygon.
var almostGlobal = ee.Geometry.Polygon({
  coords: [[-180, -80], [180, -80], [180, 80], [-180, 80], [-180, -80]],
  geodesic: false
});
Map.addLayer(almostGlobal, {}, 'almostGlobal');

var vectors = bounds.selfMask().reduceToVectors({
  reducer: ee.Reducer.countEvery(),
  geometry: almostGlobal,
  // Set the scale to the maximum possible given
  // the required precision of the computation.
  scale: 50000,
});
Map.addLayer(vectors, {}, 'vectors');

In the previous example, note the use of a non-geodesic polygon for use in global reductions.

Don't use reduceToVectors() with reduceRegions()

Don't use a FeatureCollection returned by reduceToVectors() as an input to reduceRegions(). Instead, add the bands you want to reduce before calling reduceToVectors():

var etopo = ee.Image('NOAA/NGDC/ETOPO1');
var mod11a1 = ee.ImageCollection('MODIS/006/MOD11A1');

// Approximate land boundary.
var bounds = etopo.select(0).gt(-100);

// Non-geodesic polygon.
var almostGlobal = ee.Geometry.Polygon({
  coords: [[-180, -80], [180, -80], [180, 80], [-180, 80], [-180, -80]],
  geodesic: false
});

var lst = mod11a1.first().select(0);

var means = bounds.selfMask().addBands(lst).reduceToVectors({
  reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
  geometry: almostGlobal,
  scale: 1000,
  maxPixels: 1e10
});
print(means.limit(10));

Note that other ways of reducing pixels of one image within zones of another include reduceConnectedCommponents() and/or grouping reducers.

Use fastDistanceTransform() for neighborhood operations

For some convolution operations, fastDistanceTransform() may be more efficient than reduceNeighborhood() or convolve(). For example, to do erosion and/or dilation of binary inputs:

var aw3d30 = ee.Image('JAXA/ALOS/AW3D30_V1_1');

// Make a simple binary layer from a threshold on elevation.
var mask = aw3d30.select('AVE').gt(300);
Map.setCenter(-122.0703, 37.3872, 11);
Map.addLayer(mask, {}, 'mask');

// Distance in pixel units.
var distance = mask.fastDistanceTransform().sqrt();
// Threshold on distance (three pixels) for a dilation.
var dilation = distance.lt(3);
Map.addLayer(dilation, {}, 'dilation');

// Do the reverse for an erosion.
var notDistance = mask.not().fastDistanceTransform().sqrt();
var erosion = notDistance.gt(3);
Map.addLayer(erosion, {}, 'erosion');

Use the optimizations in reduceNeighborhood()

If you need to perform a convolution and can't use fastDistanceTransform(), use the optimizations in reduceNeighborhood().

var l8raw = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_RT');
var composite = ee.Algorithms.Landsat.simpleComposite(l8raw);

var bands = ['B4', 'B3', 'B2'];

var optimizedConvolution = composite.select(bands).reduceNeighborhood({
  reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
  kernel: ee.Kernel.square(3),
  optimization: 'boxcar' // Suitable optimization for mean.
}).rename(bands);

var viz = {bands: bands, min: 0, max: 72};
Map.setCenter(-122.0703, 37.3872, 11);
Map.addLayer(composite, viz, 'composite');
Map.addLayer(optimizedConvolution, viz, 'optimizedConvolution');

Don't sample more data than you need

Resist the urge to increase your training dataset size unnecessarily. Although increasing the amount of training data is an effective machine learning strategy in some circumstances, it can also increase computational cost with no corresponding increase in accuracy. (For an understanding of when to increase training dataset size, see this reference). The following example demonstrates how requesting too much training data can result in the dreaded "Computed value is too large" error:

Don't sample too much data!

var l8raw = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_RT');
var composite = ee.Algorithms.Landsat.simpleComposite(l8raw);
var labels = ee.FeatureCollection('projects/google/demo_landcover_labels');

// No!  Not necessary.  Don't do this:
labels = labels.map(function(f) { return f.buffer(100000, 1000); });

var bands = ['B2', 'B3', 'B4', 'B5', 'B6', 'B7'];

var training = composite.select(bands).sampleRegions({
  collection: labels,
  properties: ['landcover'],
  scale: 30
});

var classifier = ee.Classifier.smileCart().train({
  features: training,
  classProperty: 'landcover',
  inputProperties: bands
});
print(classifier.explain()); // Computed value is too large

The better approach is to start with a moderate amount of data and tune the hyperparameters of the classifier to determine if you can achieve your desired accuracy:

Tune hyperparameters!

var l8raw = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_RT');
var composite = ee.Algorithms.Landsat.simpleComposite(l8raw);
var labels = ee.FeatureCollection('projects/google/demo_landcover_labels');

// Increase the data a little bit, possibly introducing noise.
labels = labels.map(function(f) { return f.buffer(100, 10); });

var bands = ['B2', 'B3', 'B4', 'B5', 'B6', 'B7'];

var data = composite.select(bands).sampleRegions({
  collection: labels,
  properties: ['landcover'],
  scale: 30
});

// Add a column of uniform random numbers called 'random'.
data = data.randomColumn();

// Partition into training and testing.
var training = data.filter(ee.Filter.lt('random', 0.5));
var testing = data.filter(ee.Filter.gte('random', 0.5));

// Tune the minLeafPopulation parameter.
var minLeafPops = ee.List.sequence(1, 10);

var accuracies = minLeafPops.map(function(p) {
  var classifier = ee.Classifier.smileCart({minLeafPopulation: p})
      .train({
        features: training,
        classProperty: 'landcover',
        inputProperties: bands
      });

  return testing
    .classify(classifier)
    .errorMatrix('landcover', 'classification')
    .accuracy();
});

print(ui.Chart.array.values({
  array: ee.Array(accuracies),
  axis: 0,
  xLabels: minLeafPops
}));

In this example, the classifier is already very accurate, so there's not much tuning to do. You might want to choose the smallest tree possible (i.e. largest minLeafPopulation) that still has the required accuracy.

Export intermediate results

Suppose your objective is to take samples from a relatively complex computed image. It is often more efficient to Export the image toAsset(), load the exported image, then sample. For example:

var image = ee.Image('UMD/hansen/global_forest_change_2018_v1_6');
var geometry = ee.Geometry.Polygon(
    [[[-76.64069800085349, 5.511777325802095],
      [-76.64069800085349, -20.483938229362376],
      [-35.15632300085349, -20.483938229362376],
      [-35.15632300085349, 5.511777325802095]]], null, false);
var testRegion = ee.Geometry.Polygon(
    [[[-48.86726050085349, -3.0475996402515717],
      [-48.86726050085349, -3.9248707849303295],
      [-47.46101050085349, -3.9248707849303295],
      [-47.46101050085349, -3.0475996402515717]]], null, false);

// Forest loss in 2016, to stratify a sample.
var loss = image.select('lossyear');
var loss16 = loss.eq(16).rename('loss16');

// Cloud masking function.
function maskL8sr(image) {
  var cloudShadowBitMask = 1 << 3;
  var cloudsBitMask = 1 << 5;
  var qa = image.select('pixel_qa');
  var mask = qa.bitwiseAnd(cloudShadowBitMask).eq(0)
      .and(qa.bitwiseAnd(cloudsBitMask).eq(0));
  return image.updateMask(mask).divide(10000)
      .select("B[0-9]*")
      .copyProperties(image, ["system:time_start"]);
}

var collection = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_SR')
    .map(maskL8sr);

// Create two annual cloud-free composites.
var composite1 = collection.filterDate('2015-01-01', '2015-12-31').median();
var composite2 = collection.filterDate('2017-01-01', '2017-12-31').median();

// We want a strtatified sample of this stack.
var stack = composite1.addBands(composite2)
    .float(); // Export the smallest size possible.

// Export the image.  This block is commented because the export is complete.
/*
var link = '0b8023b0af6c1b0ac7b5be649b54db06'
var desc = 'Logistic_regression_stack_' + link;
Export.image.toAsset({
  image: stack,
  description: desc,
  assetId: desc,
  region: geometry,
  scale: 30,
  maxPixels: 1e10
})
*/

// Load the exported image.
var exportedStack = ee.Image(
  'projects/google/Logistic_regression_stack_0b8023b0af6c1b0ac7b5be649b54db06');

// Take a very small sample first, to debug.
var testSample = exportedStack.addBands(loss16).stratifiedSample({
  numPoints: 1,
  classBand: 'loss16',
  region: testRegion,
  scale: 30,
  geometries: true
});
print(testSample); // Check this in the console.

// Take a large sample.
var sample = exportedStack.addBands(loss16).stratifiedSample({
  numPoints: 10000,
  classBand: 'loss16',
  region: geometry,
  scale: 30,
});

// Export the large sample...

In this example, note that the imagery is exported as float. Don't export at double precision unless absolutely necessary. When doing this export, note that a Code Editor link (obtained immediately prior to export) is embedded in the filename for reproduceability.

Once the export is completed, reload the asset and proceed with sampling from it. Note that a very small sample over a very small test area is run first, for debugging. When that is shown to succeed, take a larger sample and export it. Such large samples typically need to be exported. Do not expect such samples to be available interactively (for example through print()) or usable (for example as input to a classifier) without exporting them first.

Join vs. map-filter

Suppose you want to join collections based on time, location or some metadata property. Generally, this is most efficiently accomplished with a join. The following example does a spatio-temporal join between the Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 collections:

var s2 = ee.ImageCollection('COPERNICUS/S2')
    .filterBounds(ee.Geometry.Point([-2.0205, 48.647]));

var l8 = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_SR');

var joined = ee.Join.saveAll('landsat').apply({
  primary: s2,
  secondary: l8,
  condition: ee.Filter.and(
    ee.Filter.maxDifference({
      difference: 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24, // One day in milliseconds
      leftField: 'system:time_start',
      rightField: 'system:time_start',
    }),
    ee.Filter.intersects({
      leftField: '.geo',
      rightField: '.geo',
    })
  )
});
print(joined);

Although you should try a join first (Export if needed), occasionally a filter() within a map() can also be effective, particularly for very large collections.

var s2 = ee.ImageCollection('COPERNICUS/S2')
    .filterBounds(ee.Geometry.Point([-2.0205, 48.647]));

var l8 = ee.ImageCollection('LANDSAT/LC08/C01/T1_SR');

var mappedFilter = s2.map(function(image) {
  var date = image.date();
  var landsat = l8
      .filterBounds(image.geometry())
      .filterDate(date.advance(-1, 'day'), date.advance(1, 'day'));
  // Return the input image with matching scenes in a property.
  return image.set({
    landsat: landsat,
    size: landsat.size()
  });
}).filter(ee.Filter.gt('size', 0));
print(mappedFilter);

reduceRegion() vs. reduceRegions() vs. for-loop

Calling reduceRegions() with a very large or complex FeatureCollection as input may result in the dreaded "Computed value is too large" error. One potential solution is to map reduceRegion() over the FeatureCollection instead. Another potential solution is to use a (gasp) for-loop. Although this is strongly discouraged in Earth Engine as described here, here and here, reduceRegion() can be implemented in a for-loop to perform large reductions.

Suppose your objective is to obtain the mean of pixels (or any statistic) in each feature in a FeatureCollection for each image in an ImageCollection. The following example compares the three approaches previously described:

// Table of countries.
var countriesTable = ee.FeatureCollection("USDOS/LSIB_SIMPLE/2017");
// Time series of images.
var mod13a1 = ee.ImageCollection("MODIS/006/MOD13A1");

// MODIS vegetation indices (always use the most recent version).
var band = 'NDVI';
var imagery = mod13a1.select(band);

// Option 1: reduceRegions()
var testTable = countriesTable.limit(1); // Do this outside map()s and loops.
var data = imagery.map(function(image) {
  return image.reduceRegions({
    collection: testTable,
    reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
    scale: 500
  }).map(function(f) {
    return f.set({
      time: image.date().millis(),
      date: image.date().format()
    });
  });
}).flatten();
print(data.first());

// Option 2: mapped reduceRegion()
var data = countriesTable.map(function(feature) {
  return imagery.map(function(image) {
    return ee.Feature(feature.geometry().centroid(100),
        image.reduceRegion({
          reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
          geometry: feature.geometry(),
          scale: 500
        })).set({
          time: image.date().millis(),
          date: image.date().format()
        }).copyProperties(feature);
  });
}).flatten();
print(data.first());

// Option 3: for-loop (WATCH OUT!)
var size = countriesTable.size();
// print(size); // 312
var countriesList = countriesTable.toList(1); // Adjust size.
var data = ee.FeatureCollection([]); // Empty table.
for (var j=0; j<1; j++) { // Adjust size.
  var feature = ee.Feature(countriesList.get(j));
  // Convert ImageCollection > FeatureCollection
  var fc = ee.FeatureCollection(imagery.map(function(image) {
    return ee.Feature(feature.geometry().centroid(100),
        image.reduceRegion({
          reducer: ee.Reducer.mean(),
          geometry: feature.geometry(),
          scale: 500
        })).set({
          time: image.date().millis(),
          date: image.date().format()
        }).copyProperties(feature);
  }));
  data = data.merge(fc);
}
print(data.first());

Note that the first() thing from each collection is printed, for debugging purposes. You should not expect that the complete result will be available interactively: you'll need to Export. Also note that for-loops should be used with extreme caution and only as a last resort. Finally, the for-loop requires manually obtaining the size of the input collection and hardcoding that in the appropriate locations. If any of that sounds unclear to you, don't use a for-loop.

Use forward differencing for neighbors in time

Suppose you have a temporally sorted ImageCollection (i.e. a time series) and you want to compare each image to the previous (or next) image. Rather than use iterate() for this purpose, it may be more efficient to use an array-based forward differencing. The following example uses this method to de-duplicate the Sentinel-2 collection, where duplicates are defined as images with the same day of year:

var sentinel2 = ee.ImageCollection('COPERNICUS/S2');
var sf = ee.Geometry.Point([-122.47555371521855, 37.76884708376152]);
var s2 = sentinel2
    .filterBounds(sf)
    .filterDate('2018-01-01', '2019-12-31');

var withDoys = s2.map(function(image) {
  var ndvi = image.normalizedDifference(['B4', 'B8']).rename('ndvi');
  var date = image.date();
  var doy = date.getRelative('day', 'year');
  var time = image.metadata('system:time_start');
  var doyImage = ee.Image(doy)
      .rename('doy')
      .int();
  return ndvi.addBands(doyImage).addBands(time)
      .clip(image.geometry()); // Appropriate use of clip.
});

var array = withDoys.toArray();
var timeAxis = 0;
var bandAxis = 1;

var dedupe = function(array) {
  var time = array.arraySlice(bandAxis, -1);
  var sorted = array.arraySort(time);
  var doy = sorted.arraySlice(bandAxis, -2, -1);
  var left = doy.arraySlice(timeAxis, 1);
  var right = doy.arraySlice(timeAxis, 0, -1);
  var mask = ee.Image(ee.Array([[1]]))
      .arrayCat(left.neq(right), timeAxis);
  return array.arrayMask(mask);
};

var deduped = dedupe(array);

// Inspect these outputs to confirm that duplicates have been removed.
print(array.reduceRegion('first', sf, 10));
print(deduped.reduceRegion('first', sf, 10));

Inspect the printed collections to verify that duplicates have been removed.