>=

"Greater than or equal to" operator.

Syntax

expr_1 >= expr_2

Operands

expr_1, expr_2
A pair of valid scalar expressions.

Example

Expression Result
(3 - 1) >= (5 * 2) 0
1 >= -1 1
0 >= 0 1
0 < {-1, 0, 1} {0, 0, 1}
{-1, 0, 1} < 0 {1, 0, 0}
3 < {{1, 2, 3}, {2, 4, 6}} {{0, 0, 0}, {0, 1, 1}}
{{1, 2, 3}, {2, 4, 6}} < 3 {{1, 1, 0}, {1, 0, 0}}

Comments

The result is a scalar.

If the value of expr_1 is greater than or equal to the value of expr_2, the result is one.

If the value of expr_1 is strictly less than the value of expr_2, the result is zero.

It is possible for either expr_1 or expr_2 to be a vector or a matrix, but one must be a scalar.

If expr_1 is a vector, and expr_2 is a scalar, then the result will be a vector whose values will be 0 if the corresponding elements of expr_1 are strictly less than expr_2, and 1 otherwise. The result vector will have the same number of elements as the original vector.

If expr_1 is a scalar, and expr_2 is a vector, then the result will be a vector whose values will be 0 if the corresponding elements of expr_2 are greater than or equal to expr_1, and 1 otherwise. The result vector will have the same number of elements as the original vector.

If expr_1 is a matrix, and expr_2 is a scalar, then the result will be a matrix whose values will be 0 if the corresponding elements of expr_1 are strictly less than expr_2, and 1 otherwise. The result matrix will have the same number of rows and columns as the original matrix.

If expr_1 is a scalar, and expr_2 is a matrix, then the result will be a matrix whose values will be 0 if the corresponding elements of expr_2 are greater than or equal to expr_1, and 1 otherwise. The result matrix will have the same number of rows as the original matrix.