0x00 Lesson
If you have several conditions using if
and else if
, it’s often clearer to use a different construct known as switch case
. Using this approach you write your condition once, then list all possible outcomes and what should happen for each of them.
To try this out, here’s a weather constant containing the string sunny:
let weather = "sunny"
We can use a switch block
to print one of four different messages:
switch weather {
case "rain":
print("Bring an umbrella")
case "snow":
print("Wrap up warm")
case "sunny":
print("Wear sunscreen"')
default:
print("Enjoy your day!")
}
In that example, the last case - default
- is required because Swift makes sure you cover all possible cases so that no eventuality is missed off. If the weather is anything other than rain, snow, or sun, the default case will be run.
Swift will only run the code inside each case. If you want execution to continue on to the next case, use the fallthrough
keyword like this:
switch weather {
case "rain":
print("Bring an umbrella")
case "snow":
print("Wrap up warm")
case "sunny":
print("Wear sunscreen")
fallthrough
default:
print("Enjoy your day!")
}
0x01 Tips
Swift takes the safety
of your code seriously, which means it will make sure all possibilities are handled.
0x02 我的小作品
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