Decision Making
Programming If construct and Switch sonstruct Details There are two types of decision making statements in Java. They are: • if statements • switch statements The if Statement: An if statement consists of a Boolean expression followed by one or more statements. Syntax: The syntax of an if statement is: if(Boolean_expression) { //Statements will execute if the Boolean expression is true } If the Boolean expression evaluates to true then the block of code inside the if statement will be executed. If not the first set of code after the end of the if statement (after the closing curly brace) will be executed. The if...else Statement: An if statement can be followed by an optional else statement, which executes when the Boolean expression is false. Syntax: The syntax of an if...else is: if(Boolean_expression){ //Executes when the Boolean expression is true }else{ //Executes when the Boolean expression is false } The if...else if...else Statement: An if statement can be followed by an optional else if...else statement, which is very useful to test various conditions using single if...else if statement. When using if , else if , else statements there are few points to keep in mind. • An if can have zero or one else's and it must come after any else if's. • An if can have zero to many else if's and they must come before the else. • Once an else if succeeds, none of the remaining else if's or else's will be tested. Syntax: The syntax of an if...else is: if(Boolean_expression 1){ //Executes when the Boolean expression 1 is true }else if(Boolean_expression 2){ //Executes when the Boolean expression 2 is true }else if(Boolean_expression 3){ //Executes when the Boolean expression 3 is true }else { //Executes when the none of the above condition is true. } Nested if...else Statement: It is always legal to nest if-else statements which means you can use one if or else if statement inside another if or else if statement. Syntax: The syntax for a nested if...else is as follows: if(Boolean_expression 1){ //Executes when the Boolean expression 1 is true if(Boolean_expression 2){ //Executes when the Boolean expression 2 is true } } You can nest else if...else in the similar way as we have nested if statement. The switch Statement: A switch statement allows a variable to be tested for equality against a list of values. Each value is called a case, and the variable being switched on is checked for each case. Syntax: The syntax of enhanced for loop is: switch(expression){ case value : //Statements break; //optional case value : //Statements break; //optional //You can have any number of case statements. default : //Optional //Statements } The following rules apply to a switch statement: • The variable used in a switch statement can only be a byte, short, int, or char. • You can have any number of case statements within a switch. Each case is followed by the value to be compared to and a colon. • The value for a case must be the same data type as the variable in the switch and it must be a constant or a literal. • When the variable being switched on is equal to a case, the statements following that case will execute until a break statement is reached. • When a break statement is reached, the switch terminates, and the flow of control jumps to the next line following the switch statement. • Not every case needs to contain a break. If no break appears, the flow of control will fall throughto subsequent cases until a break is reached. • A switch statement can have an optional default case, which must appear at the end of the switch. The default case can be used for performing a task when none of the cases is true. No break is needed in the default case.
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