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Engineering LibreTexts

5.7: The Switch Statement

  • Page ID
    136642
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    A switch statement is another way to create branches. It is especially useful when you want to compare one value against several possible choices. A switch statement can often make code cleaner than a long chain of if-elseif statements.

    switch expression
    case value1
    action1
    case value2
    action2
    case value3
    action3
    otherwise
    action4
    end

    MATLAB evaluates the expression after the word switch. It then compares the result to each case. If one case matches, MATLAB runs the action in that case. If none of the cases match, MATLAB runs the otherwise block, if one is provided.

    Example: Letter Grade from a Quiz Score

    Suppose a quiz is graded from 0 to 10 and we want to convert a numerical score to a letter grade. A switch statement is a natural choice because the rounded score can be compared to several exact values.

    function grade = letterGrade(quiz)
    % letterGrade returns the letter grade corresponding to a quiz score.
    
    if quiz < 0 || quiz > 10
        grade = 'X';   % X means invalid score
    else
        switch round(quiz)
            case 10
                grade = 'A+';
            case 9
                grade = 'A';
            case 8
                grade = 'B';
            case 7
                grade = 'C';
            case 6
                grade = 'D';
            otherwise
                grade = 'F';
        end
    end
    end

    Notice that the function uses both if and switch statements. First, the if statement checks whether the input is valid. Then, if the input is valid, the switch statement assigns a letter grade.

    Example: Using otherwise for Error Handling

    The otherwise branch is useful when the user may enter something unexpected. In the following example, the user is supposed to enter only 1, 3, or 5.

    % switchError.m
    % Example of otherwise for an error message.
    
    choice = input('Enter a 1, 3, or 5: ');
    
    switch choice
        case 1
            disp('It is a one!')
        case 3
            disp('It is a three!')
        case 5
            disp('It is a five!')
        otherwise
            disp('Follow directions next time!')
    end
    Note

    When Should I Use switch?

    Use switch when one variable or expression is being compared to several specific values. Use if-elseif-else when your conditions involve ranges, inequalities, or more complicated logical expressions.


    This page titled 5.7: The Switch Statement is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Zara Noroozi.

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