Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
> 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
A line under the greater than symbol means, "greater than or equal to" and can also be represented by ">=" on the keyboard.
Not greater than or equal to.
The less than symbol is and you can add the symbol in the input line when typing a formula.
≥ but without the line underneath.
A number with a line above it - 4
The symbol for greater than is > and the symbol for less than is <
The symbol for greater than is >
It is > for less than and < for 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.
a filled in circle/dot means "greater than or eaqual to/less than or equal to" (depending on which way the arrow is pointing. an empty cirlce means only "greater than/less than". the greater than/less than symbol with the line under it will indicate the filled in circle. the normal greater than/less than symbol willl indicate the hollow cirlce
In the same way that a diagonal line through the equals symbol changes equals (=) to does not equal (≠), a near-vertical line through the greater than symbol (>), changes it to not greater than. Unfortunately I cannot find it in my symbols set. One alternative, of course, is to change the equation around: x not greater than y is the same as x less than or equal to (≤) y. When inverting the equation in this fashion, you do need to remember to add = if it was not there and remove it if it was. ie not (greater than) is the same as less than or equal to not (greater than or equal to) is the same as less than not (less than) is the same as greater than or equal to not (less than or equal to) is the same as greater than