Less. It's an approximation.
Less than Less than or equal to Equal to Greater than Greater than or equal to
No, ten is equal to ten. If you see a less than/equal to sign, the statement is true.A less than/equal to sign has a less than sign on top of an equal sign.
Not sure what you're talking about, but possibly the prime counting function? pi(x) is the number of prime numbers less than or equal to x. e.g. pi(5) is 3 because there are 3 prime numbers (2, 3, 5) less than or equal to 5.
times it
You can use the Not function or the <> operator, which is the < and the > beside each other. To see if the values in A1 and A2 are not equal to each other, you can type: =A1<>A2 or =Not(A1=A2) In each case they will either give you TRUE if they are not equal or FALSE if they are equal, in the cell that you enter the formula into.
The opposite of less than or equal to is greater than or equal.And also:The opposite of greater than or equal to is less than or equal.
Less. It's an approximation.
Less than Less than or equal to Equal to Greater than Greater than or equal to
It depends on the pie chart. It may not have any numbers less than 4, or all of them.
1/3 is greater because 25% is equal to 1/4. Since the denominator on one-third is lower than the pieces of the pie (pie example xD) are bigger. :)
No, ten is equal to ten. If you see a less than/equal to sign, the statement is true.A less than/equal to sign has a less than sign on top of an equal sign.
the symbol for less than is "<" while the symbol for less than or equal to is "<" with "_" underneath it.
> greater than < less than = equal to
if a is less than and not equal to b, it is written a < bIf a is less than or equal to b, it is written a ≤ b
Any number greater than 0 and less than 3.14
p is less than or equal to 4