A switch statement can replace multiple if checks.
It gives a more descriptive way to compare a value with multiple variants.
The syntax
The switch has one or more case blocks and an optional default.
It looks like this:
switch(x) {
case 'value1': // if (x === 'value1')
...
[break]
case 'value2': // if (x === 'value2')
...
[break]
default:
...
[break]
}
- The value of
xis checked for a strict equality to the value from the firstcase(that is,value1) then to the second (value2) and so on. - If the equality is found,
switchstarts to execute the code starting from the correspondingcase, until the nearestbreak(or until the end ofswitch). - If no case is matched then the
defaultcode is executed (if it exists).
An example
An example of switch (the executed code is highlighted):
let a = 2 + 2;
switch (a) {
case 3:
alert( 'Too small' );
break;
case 4:
alert( 'Exactly!' );
break;
case 5:
alert( 'Too big' );
break;
default:
alert( "I don't know such values" );
}
Here the switch starts to compare a from the first case variant that is 3. The match fails.
Then 4. That’s a match, so the execution starts from case 4 until the nearest break.
If there is no break then the execution continues with the next case without any checks.
An example without break:
let a = 2 + 2;
switch (a) {
case 3:
alert( 'Too small' );
case 4:
alert( 'Exactly!' );
case 5:
alert( 'Too big' );
default:
alert( "I don't know such values" );
}
In the example above we’ll see sequential execution of three alerts:
alert( 'Exactly!' );
alert( 'Too big' );
alert( "I don't know such values" );
switch/case argumentBoth switch and case allow arbitrary expressions.
For example:
let a = "1";
let b = 0;
switch (+a) {
case b + 1:
alert("this runs, because +a is 1, exactly equals b+1");
break;
default:
alert("this doesn't run");
}
Here +a gives 1, that’s compared with b + 1 in case, and the corresponding code is executed.
Grouping of “case”
Several variants of case which share the same code can be grouped.
For example, if we want the same code to run for case 3 and case 5:
let a = 3;
switch (a) {
case 4:
alert('Right!');
break;
case 3: // (*) grouped two cases
case 5:
alert('Wrong!');
alert("Why don't you take a math class?");
break;
default:
alert('The result is strange. Really.');
}
Now both 3 and 5 show the same message.
The ability to “group” cases is a side effect of how switch/case works without break. Here the execution of case 3 starts from the line (*) and goes through case 5, because there’s no break.
Type matters
Let’s emphasize that the equality check is always strict. The values must be of the same type to match.
For example, let’s consider the code:
let arg = prompt("Enter a value?");
switch (arg) {
case '0':
case '1':
alert( 'One or zero' );
break;
case '2':
alert( 'Two' );
break;
case 3:
alert( 'Never executes!' );
break;
default:
alert( 'An unknown value' );
}
- For
0,1, the firstalertruns. - For
2the secondalertruns. - But for
3, the result of thepromptis a string"3", which is not strictly equal===to the number3. So we’ve got a dead code incase 3! Thedefaultvariant will execute.
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