Not greater than or equal to.
It means greater than or equal to
it means to go and munch under
The discriminant
The only thing that a square root symbol does is that it symbolises an operation (taking the square root) of whatever is under the sign.
Greater, 16/5 is over one in fact its about 3.2, 2/3 is under 1.
> is greater than; with a line under it it is greater than or equal to < is less than; with a line under it it is less than or equal to
Shift + upper slash
A line under the greater than symbol means, "greater than or equal to" and can also be represented by ">=" on the keyboard.
If a is not less than b then a is greater than or equal to b. The symbol for "greater than or equal to " is > with a bar under it -- a combination of the equal sign (=) and the greater than sign (>). In many computer languages you can use >= with no space between for this relation.
To slash prices means to cut the price, as for a sale. Here are some sentences.Today we are going to slash prices on all our dishes!I hope that store is planning to slash prices on their televisions for Christmas.I only buy clothing in that store when they slash prices.add the words ''slash prices'' to an uncomplete sentence. Such as;The store would go under if they did not slash prices.
Since the backwards slash is the prefix of an escape character, in order to encode a backwards slash in a constant, simply use two of them. char backslash = '\\'; If you need to know where it is look under the backspace key : ) // \\
use the slash under backspace
a slash looks like this (under the question mark on your keyboard) / a dash looks like this (next to the zero button on your keyboard) -
Less than (<) Greater than (>) Equal to (=) Greater than or equal to (> but it has another horizontal line under it) Less than or equal to (< but it has another horizontal line under it) Not Equal to (= but with a / through it)
The back slash is located above the enter key and to the right of the bracket keys, the underscore is to the right of the 0, on the same key as the minus.The forward slash is on the same key as the question mark.
The Slash '/' also known as the Forward Slash, is found on the same key as the question mark. The key in question under the Slash key, is most likely the Context Menu key, as it is the least self evident to many users. The Context Menu key brings up the Context Menu, similar to right-clicking. However, this does not count as right-clicking.
under scope