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When writing some vb code I tripped and I'm still left wondering why. I was ORing the case expectation yet a value lieing within this range didn't warrant a match; why not?

Example Code:

    Select Case 2
        Case 0
            ''// Some logic
        Case 1
            ''// Some other logic
        Case 2 Or 3
            Console.WriteLine("hit")
     End Select

With the above I would naturally assume that "hit" would be printed, but that's not the case.

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5 Answers

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Use the comma operator to delimit case statements

Select Case 2
    Case 0,1,2,3
        Console.WriteLine("hit")
 End Select
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my intent is not for case 0 and 1 to fall through. But the comma is what I was after. – vanslly Feb 17 at 1:27
vote up 1 vote down

As Jared* said, you need to use the comma operator to delimit case statements.

The or you were doing is a bitwise OR, resulting in it being "3". Amusingly, "2 AND 3" would probably have worked for your specific case.

*Can't vote up with my puny rep, sorry!

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vote up 7 vote down

JaredPar has it right but you can also use the To construct

Select Case 2
    Case 0,1
    Case 2 To 3
        Console.WriteLine("Hit")
End Select

This would be 0 or 1 do nothing, 2 or 3 print Hit...The To construct is a range...

Here's the MSDN

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True, and I was using the To keyword, but it's slightly hacky because if say 2 and 3 were Enum vals and the enum gets refactored without taking this use into consideration - which if it's in some class deep in the bowels of a large system - then you have some unexpected breaks ;) – vanslly Feb 17 at 2:37
vote up 2 vote down

Edit: It appears I was wrong in assuming that VB.NET doesn't allow Case ORing. I was thinking in C# and IL and it appears I was wrong.

However, as someone pointed out, the reason your code did not work was because Case 2 Or 3 was evaluating 2 Or 3 as a bitwise or and hence evaluating to Case 3.

For clarification:


       2 binary = 0000 0010
       3 binary = 0000 0011
  2 Or 3 binary = 0000 0011 (= 3)

  Select Case 2
     Case 0            '--> no match

     Case 1            '--> no match

     Case 2 Or 3       '(equivalent to Case 3  --> no match)
   End Select

However, I feel that I should point out that for the sake of performance, one should not use such constructs. When the compiler encounters Select statements (switch in C#) it will try to compile them using lookup tables and the switch MSIL instruction but in the case where you have something like Case 1,2,11,55 the compiler will not be able to convert that to a lookup table and it will have to use a series of compares (which is like using If.. Else).

The point is that in order to really take advantage of the Select statement, the cases should be designed with that in mind. Otherwise, the only benefit is code readability.

A well designed switch is an O(1) operation whereas an poorly designed one (which is equivalent to a series of If..Then..Else statements) is an O(n) operation.

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Thanks, that allows my mind to rest now. Reading the code logically didn't give me any hints that I was doing something wrong. – vanslly Feb 17 at 1:24
I'm glad you were able to find the answer to the problem you were looking to solve and I hope the clarifications I added to my answer will help you craft better Select statements :) – theghost Feb 17 at 1:40
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This will allow you to perform "something" in the case of 0, "something else" in the case of 1, "hit" in the case of 2 or 3 or "hit else" otherwise.

Select Case 2
    Case 0
        Console.WriteLine("something")
    Case 1
        Console.WriteLine("something else")
    Case Is 2 To 3
        Console.WriteLine("hit")
    Else
        Console.WriteLine("hit else")
 End Select
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