Question -
Answer -
Following example to understand all the comparison operators available in Python programming language:
# !/usr/bin/python
a = 21
b = 10
c = 0
if (a = = b ):
print “Line 1 – a is equal to b”
else:
print “Line 1 – a is not equal to b”
if ( a ! = b ):
print “Line 2 – a is not equal to b”
else:
print “Line 2 – a is equal to b”
if (a <> b):
print “Line 3 – a is not equal to b”
else:
print “Line 3 – a is equal to b”
if ( a < b ):
print “Line 4 – a is less than b”
else:
print “Line 4 – a is not less than b”
if (a > b ):
print “Line 5 – a is greater than b”
else:
print “Line 5 – a is not greater than b”
a = 5;
b = 20;
if (a < = b):
print “Line 6 – a is either less than or equal to b”
else:
print “Line 6 – a is neither less than nor equal to b”
if (b > = a):
print “Line 7 – b is either greater than or equal to b”
else:
print “Line 7 – b is neither greater than nor equal to b”
When you execute the above program it produces following result:
Line 1 – a is not equal to b
Line 2 – a is not equal to b
Line 3 – a is not equal to b
Line 4 – a is not less than b
Line 5 – a is greater than b
Line 6 – a is either less than or equal to b
Line 7 – b is either greater than or equal to b