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Compares two expressions (a comparison operator). When you compare nonnull expressions, the result is TRUE if the left operand has a value lower than or equal to the right operand; otherwise, the result is FALSE.
Unlike the = (equality) comparison operator, the result of the >= comparison of two NULL values does not depend on the ANSI_NULLS setting.
Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions
Syntax
expression <= expression
Arguments
- expression
Is any valid expression. Both expressions must have implicitly convertible data types. The conversion depends on the rules of data type precedence.
Result Types
Boolean
Examples
A. Using <= in a simple query
The following example returns all rows in the HumanResources.Department table that have a value in DepartmentID that is less than or equal to the value 3.
USE AdventureWorks2012;
GO
SELECT DepartmentID, Name
FROM HumanResources.Department
WHERE DepartmentID <= 3
ORDER BY DepartmentID;
Here is the result set.
DepartmentID Name
------------ --------------------------------------------------
1 Engineering
2 Tool Design
3 Sales
(3 row(s) affected)