C++ <vector> - operator>= Function
The C++ <vector> operator>= function is used to check whether the first vector is greater than or equal to the second vector or not. It returns true if the first vector is greater than or equal to the second vector, else returns false. operator>= compares elements of vectors sequentially and stops comparison after first mismatch.
Syntax
template <class T, class Alloc> bool operator>= (const vector<T,Alloc>& lhs, const vector<T,Alloc>& rhs);
template <class T, class Alloc> bool operator>= (const vector<T,Alloc>& lhs, const vector<T,Alloc>& rhs);
Parameters
lhs |
First vector. |
rhs |
Second vector. |
Return Value
Returns true if the contents of lhs are lexicographically greater than or equal to the contents of rhs, else returns false.
Time Complexity
Linear i.e, Θ(n).
Example:
In the example below, operator>= function is used to check whether the first vector is greater than or equal to the second vector or not.
#include <iostream> #include <vector> using namespace std; int main (){ vector<int> vec1 {10, 20}; vector<int> vec2 {10, 20, 30}; vector<int> vec3 {0, 10, 20}; if (vec1 >= vec2) cout<<"vec1 is greater than or equal to vec2.\n"; else cout<<"vec1 is not greater than or equal to vec2.\n"; if (vec1 >= vec3) cout<<"vec1 is greater than or equal to vec3.\n"; else cout<<"vec1 is not greater than or equal to vec3.\n"; return 0; }
The output of the above code will be:
vec1 is not greater than or equal to vec2. vec1 is greater than or equal to vec3.
❮ C++ <vector> Library