true
If the numbers in the specified range are specified from lower to higher, then, to be in the range, your number must be greater than or equal to the first, and it must also be less than or equal to the second.
They are equal numbers
The numbers have exactly the same value.
fifteen sixteenths, and an infinity of other numbers less than one as well as the infinity of numbers greater than or equal to one.
Depends on what Fx is.
Less than.
If the numbers in the specified range are specified from lower to higher, then, to be in the range, your number must be greater than or equal to the first, and it must also be less than or equal to the second.
They are equal numbers
Both numbers are equal.
Comparison
The numbers have exactly the same value.
Compare numbers.
All numbers greater than or equal to 0.5 and less than 1.5.
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.
No. Odd numbers can be greater than, smaller than, or equal to prime numbers.
Unless this is a trick question, the answer is that there are no such numbers.
fifteen sixteenths, and an infinity of other numbers less than one as well as the infinity of numbers greater than or equal to one.