60

I have a few different buttons that are calling the same function and I would like to have them wrapped in a switch statement instead of using a bunch of else if conditions. Any help would be great!!!

events:
"click .red, .blue, #black, #yellow" : "openOverlay"

openOverlay: (e) ->
  e.preventDefault()
  e.stopPropagation()

target = $(e.currentTarget)

# the view should be opened
view = 
  if target.hasClass 'red' then new App.RedView
  else if target.hasClass 'blue' then new App.BlueView
  else if target.is '#black' then new App.BlackView
  else
    null

# Open the view
App.router.overlays.add view: view if view?
1
  • It's not suitable for a switch statement anyway (hasClass vs is). Apr 13, 2014 at 18:07

2 Answers 2

117

There are two forms of switch in CoffeeScript:

switch expr
    when expr1 then ...
    when expr2 then ...
    ...
    else ...

and:

switch
    when expr1 then ...
    when expr2 then ...
    ...
    else ...

The second form might help you:

view = switch
  when target.hasClass 'red' then new App.RedView
  when target.hasClass 'blue' then new App.BlueView
  when target.is '#black' then new App.BlackView
  else null

You could leave out the else null if undefined is an acceptable value for view. You could also wrap the logic in an (explicit) function:

viewFor = (target) ->
    # There are lots of ways to do this...
    return new App.RedView   if(target.hasClass 'red')
    return new App.BlueView  if(target.hasClass 'blue')
    return new App.BlackView if(target.is '#black')
    null

view = viewFor target

Giving your logic a name (i.e. wrapping it in a function) is often useful for clarifying your code.

1
  • 9
    Beware that the then must only be used in one-line assignation. Don't put a then if you write your code below or it will fail during the compilation. Mar 4, 2016 at 14:57
22

In addition to the details in the accepted answer, switch statements in CoffeeScript also supports , to provide multiple match results:

switch someVar
    when val3, val4 then ...
    else ...

or (if your statements has multiple lines):

switch someVar
    when val3, val4
        ...
    else
        ...
2
  • 1
    I don't thinkor is right here - it will create case (val1 || val2): statement - ie. running a boolean operation on val1 and val2- which is not what I'd be expecting here. The , does the trick though.
    – Voy
    May 17, 2017 at 17:26
  • @Voy: you are right - or doesn't produce the desired result. Answer updated
    – larsmoa
    May 18, 2017 at 20:04

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