Python Greater-than or Equal-to Operator

In Python, Comparison Greater-than or Equal-to Operator takes two operands and returns a boolean value of True if the first operand is greater than or equal to the second operand, else it returns False.

Syntax

The syntax to check if the value a is greater than or equal to the value b using Greater-than or Equal-to Operator is

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a >= b

The above expression returns a boolean value.

Examples

1. Check if a number is greater than or equal to other

In the following program, we take two numbers: a, b; and check if a is greater than or equal to b.

main.py

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a = 8
b = 4

if a >= b :
    print('a is greater than or equal to b.')
else :
    print('a is not greater than or equal to b.')

Output

a is greater than or equal to b.

2. Check if a string is greater than or equal to other

In the following program, we take two string values: a, b; and check if the string a is greater than or equal to the string b lexicographically.

main.py

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a = 'apple'
b = 'banana'

if a >= b :
    print('a is greater than or equal to b.')
else :
    print('a is not greater than or equal to b.')

Output

a is not greater than or equal to b.

Conclusion

In this Python Tutorial, we learned about Comparison Greater-than or Equal-to Operator, its syntax, and usage, with examples.