comparison — comparison, relational operators
a==b a~=b or a<>b a<b a<=b a>b a>=b
any type of variable for a==b, a~=b 
	    a<>b equality comparisons and restricted to real floating point and integer
	    array for order related comparisons a<b,
	    a<=b, a>b,a>=b. 
any type of variable for a==b, a~=b 
	    a< > b equality  comparisons and restricted to
	    real floating point and integer arrays for order related comparisons
	    a<b, a<=b,
	    a>b,a>=b.
Two classes of operators have to be distinguished:
a==b, a~=b (or equivalently a<>b).
	  These operators apply to any type of operands.
a<b, a<=b,
	    a>b,a>=b. These operators apply
	    only to real floating point and integer arrays.
The semantics of the comparison operators also depend on the operands types:
like floating point and integer arrays, logical arrays, string arrays, polynomial and rationnal arrays, handle arrays, lists... the following rules apply:
If  a and  b evaluates as arrays with same types
	      and identical dimensions, the comparison is performed element by
	      element and the result is an array  of booleans of the same.
If  a and  b  evaluates as arrays 
	      with same types, but  a or  b is a 1 by
	      1 array the scalar is compared with each element of the
	      other array. The result is an array of booleans of the size of
	      the non scalar operand.
In the others cases the result is the boolean  %f
If the operand data types are differents but "compatible" like floating points and integers a type conversion is performed before the comparison.
 like function,
	libraries, the result is 	    %t if the objects are identical and  %f in the
	  other cases.
Equality comparison between operands of incompatible data types
	  returns %f.
//element wise comparisons (1:5)==3 (1:5)<=4 (1:5)<=[1 4 2 3 0] 1<[] list(1,2,3)~=list(1,3,3) //object wise comparisons (1:10)==[4,3] 'foo'==3 1==[] list(1,2,3)==1 isequal(list(1,2,3),1) isequal(1:10,1) //comparison with type conversion int32(1)==1 int32(1)<1.5 int32(1:5)<int8(3) p=poly(0,'s','c') p==0 p/poly(1,'s','c')==0