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Learn Comparison Operators | Boolean Expressions and Logical Conditions
Control Flow in Kotlin

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Comparison Operators in Kotlin

Comparison operators let you check how two values relate to each other. In Kotlin, you use operators like ==, !=, >, <, >=, and <= to compare numbers, strings, or other data types. These operators always return a Boolean result — either true or false — depending on whether the comparison is correct.

  • Use == to check if two values are equal;
  • Use != to check if two values are not equal;
  • Use > to check if one value is greater than another;
  • Use < to check if one value is less than another;
  • Use >= to check if one value is greater than or equal to another;
  • Use <= to check if one value is less than or equal to another.

You use these operators in everyday programming to make decisions, filter data, or control the flow of your code. By understanding how comparison operators work, you can write code that responds differently based on the values being compared.

Main.kt

Main.kt

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Which operator checks if two values are equal in Kotlin?

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Section 1. Chapter 2

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Section 1. Chapter 2
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