Apple Pages 2 User Manual
Page 194

194
Chapter 8
Creating Tables
Comparison operators compare two values and return TRUE or FALSE.
/
The result of dividing one
value by another value
A2/B2 returns 10
^
The result of raising one value
to the power another value
A2^B2 returns 400
%
The result of dividing a value
by 100
A2% returns 0.2
Notes:
 When a cell reference points to an empty cell, 0 is the value used.
 When a cell reference points to a cell containing FALSE, 0 is used. If the cell
contains TRUE, 1 is used. For example, TRUE + 1 returns 2.
 Using a text string with an arithmetic operator returns an error.
For example, 3 + “hello” is not a correct arithmetic operation.
This operator
Returns
Example (A2 contains 20 and
B2 contains 2)
This operator
Returns
Example (A2 contains 20 and
B2 contains 2)
=
TRUE if two values are equal
A2=B2 returns FALSE
<>
TRUE if two values aren’t equal
A2<>B2 returns TRUE
>
TRUE if the first value is
greater than the second value
A2>B2 returns TRUE
<
TRUE if the first value is less
than the second value
A2 >= TRUE if the first value is A2>=B2 returns TRUE <= TRUE if the first value is less A2<=B2 returns FALSE Notes: or text strings. TRUE > FALSE, and FALSE < TRUE. Â To type a Boolean value (TRUE or FALSE), type an equal sign, type the value in the Formula Editor, and press Return.
greater than or equal to the
second value
than or equal to the second
value
 Text strings are larger than numbers. For example, “hello” > 5 returns TRUE.
 TRUE and FALSE can be compared with each other, but not with numbers