JavaScript switch case Statement (original) (raw)

Skip to content

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the JavaScript switch statement to execute a block of code based on multiple conditions.

Introduction to the JavaScript switch case statement

The switch statement evaluates an expression, compares its results with case values, and executes the statement associated with the matching case value.

The following illustrates the syntax of the switch statement:

switch (expression) { case value1: statement1; break; case value2: statement2; break; case value3: statement3; break; default: statement; }Code language: JavaScript (javascript)

How it works.

The switch statement will stop comparing the expression‘s result with the remaining case values as long as it finds a match.

The switch statement is like the if…else…if statement. But it has more readable syntax.

The following flowchart illustrates the switch statement:

In practice, you often use a switch statement to replace a complex if-else-if statement to make the code more readable.

Technically, the switch statement is equivalent to the following if-else-if statement:

if (expression === value1) { statement1; } else if (expression === value2) { statement2; } else if (expression === value3) { statement3; } else { statement; }Code language: JavaScript (javascript)

JavaScript switch case examples

Let’s take some examples of using the JavaScript switch statement.

1) Using JavaScript switch statement to get the day of the week

The following example uses the switch statement to get the day of the week based on a day number:

`let day = 3; let dayName;

switch (day) { case 1: dayName = 'Sunday'; break; case 2: dayName = 'Monday'; break; case 3: dayName = 'Tuesday'; break; case 4: dayName = 'Wednesday'; break; case 5: dayName = 'Thursday'; break; case 6: dayName = 'Friday'; break; case 7: dayName = 'Saturday'; break; default: dayName = 'Invalid day'; }

console.log(dayName); // Tuesday`Code language: JavaScript (javascript)

Output:

TuesdayCode language: JavaScript (javascript)

How it works.

First, declare the day variable that holds the day number and the day name variable (dayName).

Second, get the day of the week based on the day number using the switch statement. If the day is 1, the day of the week is Sunday. If the day is 2, the day of the week is Monday, and so on.

Third, output the day of the week to the console.

2) Using the JavaScript switch statement to get the day count based on a month

The following example uses the switch statement to get the day count of a month:

`let year = 2016; let month = 2; let dayCount;

switch (month) { case 1: case 3: case 5: case 7: case 8: case 10: case 12: dayCount = 31; break; case 4: case 6: case 9: case 11: dayCount = 30; break; case 2: // leap year if ((year % 4 == 0 && !(year % 100 == 0)) || year % 400 == 0) { dayCount = 29; } else { dayCount = 28; } break; default: dayCount = -1; // invalid month }

console.log(dayCount); // 29`Code language: JavaScript (javascript)

In this example, we have four cases:

Summary

Quiz

Was this tutorial helpful ?