Introduction to JavaScript Switch Cases
Bolaji Ayodeji
Posted on March 13, 2019
In this short article, I will introduce you to JavaScript switch cases and how
to use them with practical examples.
PS: This article is not for those without any JavaScript knowledge, it is
expected that you're taking some tutorial or course and you just got to the
switch cases section.
This article will explain better with more practical examples to help you
understand switch cases in depth.
Prerequisites.
- Basic JavaScript knowledge
- Code editor
- Web Browser
- Your brain :)
A switch
statement can basically replace multiple if
checks in JavaScript.
It gives a more descriptive way to compare a value with multiple variants.
The Switch Syntax
The switch
has one or more case
blocks and an optional default case.
switch(x) {
case 'value1': // if (x === 'value1')
//code here
[break]
case 'value2': // if (x === 'value2')
//code here
[break]
default:
//code here
[break]
}
- The value of
x
is checked for strict equality to the value from the firstcase
(that is,value1
) then to the second (value2
) and so on. - If the equality is found,
switch
starts to execute the code starting from the correspondingcase
, until the nearestbreak
(or until the end ofswitch
). - If no case is matched then the
default
code is executed (if it exists).
Some few real examples
- Simple Play & Pause Switch
The switch
statement can be used for multiple branches based on a number or
string:
switch (movie) {
case 'play':
playMovie();
break;
case 'pause':
pauseMovie();
break;
default:
doNothing();
}
If you don’t add a break
statement, the execution will "fall through" to the
next level. It's essential that you deliberately label the fall through with a
comment if you really meant it to aid debugging:
switch (movie) {
case 'play': // fallthrough
case 'pause':
pauseMovie();
break;
default:
doNothing();
}
The default clause is optional. You can have expressions in both the switch part
and the cases if you like; comparisons take place between the two using the
===
operator:
switch (3 + 7) {
case 5 + 5:
correct();
break;
default:
neverhappens();
}
- Simple Maths Calc Switch
let average = 2 + 6;
switch (average) {
case 4:
alert( 'Too small' );
break;
case 8:
alert( 'Exactly!' );
break;
case 10:
alert( 'Too large' );
break;
default:
alert( "Incorrect values!" );
}
Here the switch
starts to compare average
from the first case
variant that
is 4
. The match fails.
Then 8
. That’s a match, so the execution starts from case 8
until the nearest
break
.
If there is no break
then the execution continues with the next
case
without any checks.
Here is an example without break
:
let average = 2 + 6;
switch (average) {
case 4:
alert( 'Too small' );
case 8:
alert( 'Exactly!' );
case 10:
alert( 'Too big' );
default:
alert( "Incorrect values!" );
}
In the example above we’ll see sequential execution of three alerts
:
alert( 'Exactly!' );
alert( 'Too big' );
alert( "Incorrect values!" );
- getDay() method switch case
The getDay() method returns the weekday as a number between 0 and 6.
(Sunday=0, Monday=1, Tuesday=2 , Wednesday=3, Thursday=4, Friday=5, Saturday=6)
This example uses the weekday number to calculate the weekday name:
switch (new Date().getDay()) {
case 0:
day = "Sunday";
break;
case 1:
day = "Monday";
break;
case 2:
day = "Tuesday";
break;
case 3:
day = "Wednesday";
break;
case 4:
day = "Thursday";
break;
case 5:
day = "Friday";
break;
case 6:
day = "Saturday";
}
The result of day will be the current weekday in day format
PS: This would change according to when you’re reading this article
I wrote this artcle on 01/04/2019 which is a Friday, so the result would be:
Friday
The default Keyword
The default keyword specifies the code to run if there is no case match,
more like an else statement:
switch (new Date().getDay()) {
case 6:
text = "Today is Saturday";
break;
case 0:
text = "Today is Sunday";
break;
default:
text = "Its not weekend yet!";
}
The result of text will be:
Its not weekend yet!
The default case does not have to be the last case in a switch block:
switch (new Date().getDay()) {
default:
text = "Its not weekend yet!";
break;
case 6:
text = "Today is Saturday";
break;
case 0:
text = "Today is Sunday";
}
If default is not the last case in the switch block, remember to end the
default case with a break.
Conclusion
There are so many practical examples of switch cases, you can head
here to learn more about switch cases.
If this article helped you, show it by sharing!!
Thanks for reading!
You can follow me on twitter @iambolajiayo
Posted on March 13, 2019
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