theta = 0 is the only solution.
In an equation, what is to the left of the equals sign equals what is to the right. In an inequality, the left side is either less than, greater than, less than or equal to, or greater than or equal to the right side.
It means equal to or (whatever the wedge means.) ≤ means "Equal to or less than." ≥ means "equal to or greater than."
Less than: x<y Greater than: x>y Equal to: x=y There is also less than or equal to, which is the less than symbol with a line over it, as well as greater than or equal to, which is the greater than symbol with a line over it. Not equal to is an equal sign with a slash. About equal to is an equal sign but with squiggly lines intead of straight.
Two quarters is equal to one half. This is because two quarters (2 x 0.25) equals 0.50, which is the same as one half (1/2). Therefore, they are equal, not less or more.
15 cm is greater than 150 mm. This is because 1 cm equals 10 mm, so 15 cm is equal to 150 mm. Therefore, 15 cm and 150 mm are equal, not greater or less.
145cm is less than 1.5m which equals 150cm
In an equation, what is to the left of the equals sign equals what is to the right. In an inequality, the left side is either less than, greater than, less than or equal to, or greater than or equal to the right side.
'r' is equal to, or anywhere between, -13 and 38 .
Because of the uniqueness of numbers, 101 equals 101, no more no less.
it is equal
Total assets less net fixed assets equals
It means equal to or (whatever the wedge means.) ≤ means "Equal to or less than." ≥ means "equal to or greater than."
It depends on what you mean by "more or less". If more or less is used to indicate approximately or nearly equal to, then the symbol used is ≈ which look like a wriggly equals symbol. If more or less is used for more than or less than but not equal to, then you would use an equals sign with a diagonal line through it ≠ which stands for "not equal to" You are right but if it's more than or less than it would look like this (less than)<(more) or (more than)>
x=10; y=10; if (x >= 10 y >= 10) { //dostuff } OR: AND: && greater than: > greater than or equals to: >= less than: < less than or equal to: <= equals: NOT: !
All numbers less than or equal to 8
x < y : x is less than y.x ≤ y : x is less than or equal to y. x > y : x is greater than y.x ≥ y : x is greater than or equal to y.
It is the 'equals' sign with a diagonal slash through it.