if() {
}else {
if (IsAlternateRow=='true')
IsAlternateRow = 'false';
else
IsAlternateRow = 'true';
}
Can I place an if and else statement inside of another else statement?
Yes, placing an if
inside an else
is perfectly acceptable practice but in most cases use of else if
is clearer and cleaner. E.g.
if (test) {
// Do something
} else if (otherTest) {
// Do something else
} else {
// Do a third thing
}
infact this is short-hand for
if (test) {
// Do something
} else {
if (otherTest) {
// Do something else
} else {
// Do a third thing
}
}
and the two should compile to almost identical programs in most situations.
Your code example is not very clear and will not compile correctly, clearer sample code may help us to help you out.
Note: the question got re-tagged as JavaScript after this answer was posted (it was originally about Java, so this answer is about Java).
In general, it is fine to place an if
and an else
inside an else
clause.
There are, however, several issues with your code. IsAlternateRow=='true'
isn't syntactically valid.
.equals()
;IsAlternateRow = !IsAlternateRow
instead of the entire nested if
.java
to javascript
, so it no longer applies. We all got pwned by late editing :(
Apr 11, 2011 at 15:26
"foo"
is a valid String constant. 'foo'
is invalid syntax.
Apr 11, 2011 at 15:28
try
IsAlternateRow = !IsAlternateRow;
(updated to show what this would look like in your code)
var IsAlternateRow = false;
if(/* -- insert equation here -- */)
{
// do something
}
else
{
IsAlternateRow = !IsAlternateRow;
}
IsAlternateRow
(interpret as false) ` = !IsAlternateRow `(interpret as !false, or true) This works from false to true and from true to false.
Apr 11, 2011 at 15:20
IsAlternateRow
will ===
the opposite of what IsAlternateRow
currently equals, in terms of Booleans.
In general, I'd say that to answer questions like this, you should ask yourself,
Is this easy to read?
Shallow-nested if/else
statements aren't terrible, but once you start nesting ad nauseum, you should probably refactor.
This is fine, but there are easier ways to do what you are doing:
IsAlternateRow = !IsAlternateRow
Yes you can. If you want to evaluate the same object/variable several time you could use a switch statement but in many case staggered if statement will do the job just as well.
To answer your question, yes, you can infinitely nest if/else statements. The code you supplied will compile no problem. Although given that you're talking about Java, I imagine unless that's pseudo code, it isn't going to provide the desired result.
Correct way to do it:
if() {
} else if (IsAlternateRow=='true') {
IsAlternateRow = 'false';
}
else
{
IsAlternateRow = 'true';
}
if (IsAlternateRow == 'true')
will certainly be false, as==
evaluates object reference equality. If you wanted string comparison, use.equals()
.java
. Now it's a "can I nest if/else statements" taggedjavascript
...