Switch statements express conditionals across many
branches.
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package main
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import (
"fmt"
"time"
)
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func main() {
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Here’s a basic switch .
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i := 2
fmt.Print("Write ", i, " as ")
switch i {
case 1:
fmt.Println("one")
case 2:
fmt.Println("two")
case 3:
fmt.Println("three")
}
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You can use commas to separate multiple expressions
in the same case statement. We use the optional
default case in this example as well.
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switch time.Now().Weekday() {
case time.Saturday, time.Sunday:
fmt.Println("It's the weekend")
default:
fmt.Println("It's a weekday")
}
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switch without an expression is an alternate way
to express if/else logic. Here we also show how the
case expressions can be non-constants.
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t := time.Now()
switch {
case t.Hour() < 12:
fmt.Println("It's before noon")
default:
fmt.Println("It's after noon")
}
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A type switch compares types instead of values. You
can use this to discover the type of an interface
value. In this example, the variable t will have the
type corresponding to its clause.
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whatAmI := func(i interface{}) {
switch t := i.(type) {
case bool:
fmt.Println("I'm a bool")
case int:
fmt.Println("I'm an int")
default:
fmt.Printf("Don't know type %T\n", t)
}
}
whatAmI(true)
whatAmI(1)
whatAmI("hey")
}
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