In JavaScript, using the switch
statement, I can do the following code:
switch(true){
case 1 === 1:
console.log(1)
break
case 1 > 1:
console.log(2)
break
default:
console.log(3)
break
}
And it's going to return 1
, since JavaScript switch
is comparing true === (1 === 1)
But the same does not happen when I try it with Python Match
statement, like as follows:
match True:
case 1 = 1:
print(1)
case 1 > 1:
print(2)
case _:
print(3)
It returns:
File "<stdin>", line 2
case 1 = 1:
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
And another error is returned if I try it this way:
Check1 = 1 == 1
Check2 = 1 > 1
match True:
case Check1:
print(1)
case Check2:
print(2)
case _:
print(3)
It returns:
case Check1:
^^^^^^
SyntaxError: name capture 'Check1' makes remaining patterns unreachable
What would be the cleanest/fastest way to do many different checks without using a lot of if's and elif's?
CodePudding user response:
In JavaScript, using the switch statement, I can do the following code
I definitely wouldn't be using JavaScript as any form of litmus or comparator for python.
If you used 1==1
in your first test case, the below is what both of your test cases are ultimately doing.
match True:
case True:
print(1)
case False: #will never get hit
print(2)
case _: #will never get hit
print(3)
This is why you get the error for the second version. True
will only ever be True
, so no other case will ever be hit.
Based on your example, it seems like you are trying to use match/case
just to determine the "truthiness" of an expression. Put the expression in the match
.
match a==1:
case True:
pass
case False:
pass
If you have a lot of expressions, you could do something like the below, although I don't think this is very good.
a = 2
match (a==1, a>1):
case (True, False):
print('equals 1')
case (False, True):
print('greater than 1')
case _:
print(_)
#OR
match ((a>1) << 1) | (a==1):
case 1:
print('equals 1')
case 2:
print('greater than 1')
case _:
print(_)
cases
should be possible results of the match
, NOT expressions that attempt to emulate the match
. You're doing it backwards. The below link should tell you pretty much everything that you need to know about match/case
, as-well-as provide you with alternatives.
Match/Case Examples and Alternatives
CodePudding user response:
Check if you are using Python 3.10, if not then use this instead and also the match case isn't meant to be used liked this, you're better off using switch case if you're just trying to print something out
The switch case in python is used by creating a function for an 'if-else-if' statement and declaring the case above like:
match = int(input("1-3: "))
def switch(case): #Function
if case == 1:
print(1)
elif case > 1:
print(2)
else:
print(3)
switch(match) #Main driver
else is the 'default' and you can add as many elif statements.