1

I have a function as below, it throws an error as not all code paths return a value. I am trying this first time in c#

public static double calTotal(double sal)
    {
        if (sal <= 1000)
        {
            return 0;
        }
        if (sal > 1000 && sal <= 3000)
        {
            return (0.15 * sal);
        }
        if (sal > 3000)
        {
            return (0.28 * sal);
        }
    }

What is the issue above?

1
  • I suspect the compiler can't tell you've covered all possible values, when in fact you have. Try using if, else if then else instead of three independent if conditions.
    – Aurora0001
    Mar 19, 2017 at 19:09

6 Answers 6

4

I suggest using standard else if syntax in order not to deceive the compiler

public static double calTotal(double sal)
{
    if (sal <= 1000)
        return 0;
    else if (sal <= 3000)
        return (0.15 * sal);
    else
        return (0.28 * sal);
}
4
  • sal > 1000 is superfluous, since sal must be > 1000 if it is not <= 1000. Mar 19, 2017 at 19:16
  • i guess no need to check if its greater than 1000 in 2nd if Mar 19, 2017 at 19:16
  • @Olivier Jacot-Descombes: thank you! You are quite right, I shouldn't have copied and pasted the conditions from the question Mar 19, 2017 at 19:17
  • @Sajeetharan: thank you! The check being copy+pased from the question is actually redundant in the context. You're quite right. Mar 19, 2017 at 19:20
2

You are checking for the same things over and over again.

After the first if statement sal is always >1000

After the second it is always >3000

You can simplify your code and get rid of the error:

public static double calTotal(double sal)
    {
        if (sal <= 1000)
        {
            return 0;
        }
        if (sal <= 3000)
        {
            return (0.15 * sal);
        }
        return (0.28 * sal);
    }

Bonus: you can make it a oneliner with chained conditional operators

public static double calTotal(double sal)
        => sal <= 1000 ? 0 : (sal <= 3000 ? 0.15 * sal : 0.28 * sal);
1

From the mathematical point of view, your code does always return a value; however, the C# compiler does not do a mathematical analysis of your code, but only sees that there is a sequence of 3 if-statements and deduces, that if none of them applies, then no value will be returned. C# only analyses the flow on a syntactical level, but not the content of the expressions.

You can simplify the code and at the same time ensure that C# sees a return in any case with:

public static double calTotal(double sal)
{
    if (sal <= 1000) return 0;
    if (sal <= 3000) return 0.15 * sal;
    return 0.28 * sal;
}

Or

public static double calTotal(double sal)
{
    return sal <= 1000 ? 0 : sal <= 3000 ? 0.15 * sal : 0.28 * sal;
}

Also, there is no need to test sal > 1000 and sal > 3000, since if the code did not return before, then sal must be greater than 1000 or greater than 3000 respectively.

0

You need to return at the end and simplify the conditionals.

public static double calTotal(double sal)
    {
        if (sal > 1000 && sal <= 3000)
        {
            return (0.15 * sal);
        }
        else if (sal > 3000)
        {
            return (0.28 * sal);
        }

        return 0;
    }
0

I am not sure if it helps, but the C# compiler would not always try to prove all use-cases.

As it is written earlier the last if is not useful (as it is a consequence of the previous ones), but if you think that this code is changing very often, and sometimes someone would put a branch that fail, you can add instead of return a throw new Exception block

public static double calTotal(double sal)
{
    if (sal <= 1000)
    {
        return 0;
    }
    if (sal > 1000 && sal <= 3000)
    {
        return (0.15 * sal);
    }
    if (sal > 3000)
    {
        return (0.28 * sal);
    }
    throw new Exception ("This line of code should never be hit");
}

If you care about the code to be like this though, make always sure to understand that putting the code with throwing exception is a burden on generated code, and this code would run a bit slower.

0

To avoid this, the best practice should be to declare a variable, change it if any clause verify and then return it at the end

    public static double calTotal(double sal)
    {
        double value = 0;
        if (sal > 1000 && sal <= 3000)
        {
            value = (0.15 * sal);
        }
        if (sal > 3000)
        {
            value = (0.28 * sal);
        }
        return value;
    }

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