App Lab Documentation

Greater than or equal operator

Category:Math

Your apps will sometimes need to check the relative size of two values, and then possibly perform some specific action using an if, if-else, or while block. < returns true if the value on the left-hand side of the opertor is greater than or equal to the value on the right-hand side of the operator.

Examples

Example: basics

// Basic numeric greater than or equal to check.
var x = 5;
var y = 4;
console.log(x >= 5);
console.log(x >= 6);
console.log(x >= y);

Example: comparing "apples" to "Apples"

Basic string greater than or equal to check. Case matters for string comparison.

// Basic string greater than or equal to check. Case matters for string comparison.
var x = "apples";
var y = "Apples";
console.log(x >= "apples");
console.log(x >= "bananas");
console.log(x >= y);

Syntax

__ >= __

Parameters

NameTypeRequired?Description
__any

The operands can be a number/string/boolean, or a variable containing a number/string/boolean, or the number/string/boolean returned by a function, or the number/string/boolean result of the evaluation of an expression.

Returns

Boolean true or false

Tips

  • If you want to test if a value is less than, you can use the > operator.
  • JavaScript will automatically perform type conversion for you when comparing two values (e.g. the integer 5 will register as equivalent to the string "5").
  • When comparing two strings, JavaScript will compare them alphabetically based on character by character comparison left to right. All the upper case letters come before the lower case letters.
  • Comparison operators include < <= == > >= !=

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