Chef and his girlfriend went on a date. Chef took 𝑋X dollars with him, and was quite sure that this would be enough to pay the bill. At the end, the waiter brought a bill of 𝑌Y dollars. Print "YES" if Chef has enough money to pay the bill, or "NO" if he has to borrow from his girlfriend and leave a bad impression on her.Input FormatThe first line of input will contain a single integer 𝑇T, denoting the number of test cases.Each test case consists of a single line of input, containing two space-separated integers 𝑋X and 𝑌Y.Output FormatFor each test case, output on a new line "YES" if Chef has enough money to pay the bill and "NO" otherwise.You may print each character of the string in either uppercase or lowercase (for example, the strings "yEs", "yes", "Yes" and "YES" will all be treated as identical).Constraints1≤𝑇≤1001≤T≤1001≤𝑋,𝑌≤1001≤X,Y≤100Sample 1:InputOutput41 11 22 150 100YESNOYESNOExplanation:Test case 11: Since the money Chef has is equal to the bill, he will be able to pay the bill.Test case 22: Since the money Chef has is less than the bill, he will have to borrow from his girlfriend and leave a bad impression on her.Test case 33: Since the money Chef has is greater than the bill, he will be able to pay the bill.Test case 44: Since the money Chef has is less than the bill, he will have to borrow from his girlfriend and leave a bad impression on her.
Question
Chef and his girlfriend went on a date. Chef took 𝑋X dollars with him, and was quite sure that this would be enough to pay the bill. At the end, the waiter brought a bill of 𝑌Y dollars. Print "YES" if Chef has enough money to pay the bill, or "NO" if he has to borrow from his girlfriend and leave a bad impression on her.Input FormatThe first line of input will contain a single integer 𝑇T, denoting the number of test cases.Each test case consists of a single line of input, containing two space-separated integers 𝑋X and 𝑌Y.Output FormatFor each test case, output on a new line "YES" if Chef has enough money to pay the bill and "NO" otherwise.You may print each character of the string in either uppercase or lowercase (for example, the strings "yEs", "yes", "Yes" and "YES" will all be treated as identical).Constraints1≤𝑇≤1001≤T≤1001≤𝑋,𝑌≤1001≤X,Y≤100Sample 1:InputOutput41 11 22 150 100YESNOYESNOExplanation:Test case 11: Since the money Chef has is equal to the bill, he will be able to pay the bill.Test case 22: Since the money Chef has is less than the bill, he will have to borrow from his girlfriend and leave a bad impression on her.Test case 33: Since the money Chef has is greater than the bill, he will be able to pay the bill.Test case 44: Since the money Chef has is less than the bill, he will have to borrow from his girlfriend and leave a bad impression on her.
Solution
This problem is about determining whether Chef has enough money to pay for his date's bill. Here's how to solve it:
Step 1: Read the number of test cases, T. This is the number of times you'll have to check
Similar Questions
There are 𝑁N students including Chef in a school. The school bus has 𝑀M seats, and every student in the school travels on the bus.It is guaranteed that 𝑁≤𝑀N≤M, so that everyone will have a seat.Chef is happy when the school bus is not full.Given 𝑁N and 𝑀M, your task is to find out whether Chef will be happy.Input FormatThe only line of input will contain two space-separated integers 𝑁N and 𝑀M, denoting the number of students in the school and the number of seats in the school bus respectively.Output FormatFor each test case, output on a new line the answer: YES, if Chef will be happy, and NO otherwise.You may print each character of the string in uppercase or lowercase (for example, the strings YeS, yEs, yes, and YES will all be treated as identical).Constraints1≤𝑁≤𝑀≤101≤N≤M≤10Sample 1:InputOutput2 3YESExplanation:There are 22 students and 33 seats on the bus.So, there will be one empty seat on the bus and Chef will be happy.Sample 2:InputOutput6 6NOExplanation:There are 66 students and 66 seats on the bus.The bus will be full and Chef will not be happy.
Chef is eagerly waiting for a piece of information. His secret agent told him that this information would be revealed to him after 𝐾K weeks.𝑋X days have already passed and Chef is getting restless now. Find the number of remaining days Chef has to wait for, to get the information.It is guaranteed that the information has not been revealed to the Chef yet.Input FormatThe first line of input will contain an integer 𝑇T — the number of test cases. The description of 𝑇T test cases follows.The first and only line of each test case contains two space-separated integers 𝐾K and 𝑋X, as described in the problem statement.Output FormatFor each test case, output the number of remaining days that Chef will have to wait for.Constraints1≤𝑇≤5001≤T≤5001≤𝐾≤101≤K≤101≤𝑋<7⋅𝐾1≤X<7⋅KSample 1:InputOutput41 51 61 11 22165Explanation:Test case 11: The information will be revealed to the Chef after 11 week, which is equivalent to 77 days. Chef has already waited for 55 days, so he needs to wait for 22 more days in order to get the information.Test case 22: The information will be revealed to the Chef after 11 week, which is equivalent to 77 days. Chef has already waited for 66 days, so he needs to wait for 11 more day in order to get the information.Test case 33: The information will be revealed to the Chef after 11 week, which is equivalent to 77 days. Chef has already waited for 11 day, so he needs to wait for 66 more days in order to get the information.Test case 44: The information will be revealed to the Chef after 11 week, which is equivalent to 77 days. Chef has already waited for 22 days, so he needs to wait for 55 more days in order to get the information.
Bob received an assignment from his school: he has two numbers 𝐴A and 𝐵B, and he has to find the sum of these two numbers.Alice, being a good friend of Bob, told him that the answer to this question is 𝐶C.Bob doesn't completely trust Alice and asked you to tell him if the answer given by Alice is correct or not.If the answer is correct print "YES", otherwise print "NO" (without quotes).Input FormatThe first line of input will contain a single integer 𝑇T, denoting the number of test cases.The first and only line of each test case consists of three space-separated integers 𝐴,𝐵,A,B, and 𝐶C.Output FormatFor each test case, output on a new line the answer: YES if Alice gave the right answer, and NO otherwise.Each character of the output may be printed in either uppercase or lowercase, i.e, the outputs Yes, YES, yEs and yes will be treated as equivalent.Constraints1≤𝑇≤1001≤T≤1000≤𝐴,𝐵,𝐶≤1000≤A,B,C≤100Sample 1:InputOutput31 2 34 5 92 3 6YESYESNOExplanation:Test case 11: 1+2=31+2=3, so Alice's answer is correct.Test case 22: 4+5=94+5=9, so Alice's answer is correct.Test case 33: 2+3=52+3=5 which doesn't equal 66, so Alice's answer is incorrect.
Four friends want to attend a concert. Each ticket costs 𝑋X rupees.They have decided to go to the concert if and only if the total cost of the tickets does not exceed 10001000 rupees.Determine whether they will be going to the concert or not.Input FormatThe first line of input will contain a single integer 𝑇T, denoting the number of test cases.Each test case consists of a single integer 𝑋X, the cost of each ticket.Output FormatFor each test case, output YES if they will be going to the concert, NO otherwise.You can print each character in uppercase or lowercase. For example, the strings YES, yes, Yes, and yES, are all considered identical.Constraints1≤𝑇≤1001≤T≤1001≤𝑋≤10001≤X≤1000Sample 1:InputOutput41005002501000YESNOYESNOExplanation:Test case 11: The total cost of all tickets is 100⋅4=400100⋅4=400 which is ≤1000≤1000. Thus, they will go to the concert.Test case 22: The total cost of all tickets is 500⋅4=2000500⋅4=2000 which is >1000>1000. Thus, they will not go to the concert.Test case 33: The total cost of all tickets is 250⋅4=1000250⋅4=1000 which is ≤1000≤1000. Thus, they will go to the concert.Test case 44: The total cost of all tickets is 1000⋅4=40001000⋅4=4000 which is >1000>1000. Thus, they will not go to the concert.
Chef has recently moved into an apartment. It takes 3030 minutes for Chef to reach office from the apartment.Chef left for the office 𝑋X minutes before Chef was supposed to reach. Determine whether or not Chef will be able to reach on time.Input FormatThe first line of input will contain a single integer 𝑇T, denoting the number of test cases.Each test case consists of a single integer 𝑋X.Output FormatFor each test case, output YES if Chef will reach on time, NO otherwise.The output is case-insensitive. Thus, the strings YES, yes, yeS, and Yes are all considered the same.Constraints1≤𝑇≤601≤T≤601≤𝑋≤601≤X≤60Sample 1:InputOutput6306014293142YESYESNONOYESYESExplanation:Test case 1: Chef leaves 3030 minutes before he is supposed to reach, so he will reach the office exactly on time since it takes 3030 minutes to commute.Test case 2: Chef will reach 3030 minutes early.Test case 3: Chef will reach 16 minutes late.
Upgrade your grade with Knowee
Get personalized homework help. Review tough concepts in more detail, or go deeper into your topic by exploring other relevant questions.