328

How would you use a switch case when you need to test for a or b in the same case?

switch (pageid) {
  case "listing-page":
  case "home-page":
    alert("hello");
    break;
  case "details-page":
    alert("goodbye");
    break;
}
3

7 Answers 7

788

You can use fall-through:

switch (pageid)
{
    case "listing-page":
    case "home-page":
        alert("hello");
        break;
    case "details-page":
        alert("goodbye");
        break;
}
5
  • 4
    I found this out before I posted the question, but thought it would be useful for the community since it's not well documented anywhere... thank you @SLaks for you're answer too.
    – Andres
    Jun 29, 2011 at 14:40
  • Hi @kei I know this isn't the proper place for this, but you answered my last question correctly stackoverflow.com/questions/21049005/… would you like to repost your answer?
    – Leon Gaban
    Jan 10, 2014 at 16:28
  • 1
    I might as well clarify the point: Once a case has evaluated to true, that's it. No more cases are checked, just all the statements executed until the end: i.e. a "break;" instruction or if the switch is terminated. Dec 22, 2014 at 9:19
  • 1
    other examples here in MDN docs Jun 24, 2015 at 9:46
  • Linters often complain when using fall-through as the fall-through can happen due to lack of a break. The recommended approach would be to create a function that would be called by both cases
    – Va5ili5
    Jun 5, 2022 at 20:17
148

Since the other answers explained how to do it without actually explaining why it works:

When the switch executes, it finds the first matching case statement and then executes each line of code after the switch until it hits either a break statement or the end of the switch (or a return statement to leave the entire containing function). When you deliberately omit the break so that code under the next case gets executed too that's called a fall-through. So for the OP's requirement:

switch (pageid) {
   case "listing-page":
   case "home-page":
      alert("hello");
      break;

   case "details-page":
      alert("goodbye");
      break;
} 

Forgetting to include break statements is a fairly common coding mistake and is the first thing you should look for if your switch isn't working the way you expected. For that reason some people like to put a comment in to say "fall through" to make it clear when break statements have been omitted on purpose. I do that in the following example since it is a bit more complicated and shows how some cases can include code to execute before they fall-through:

switch (someVar) {
   case 1:
      someFunction();
      alert("It was 1");
      // fall through
   case 2:
      alert("The 2 case");
      // fall through
   case 3:
      // fall through
   case 4:
      // fall through
   case 5:
      alert("The 5 case");
      // fall through
   case 6:
      alert("The 6 case");
      break;

   case 7:
      alert("Something else");
      break;

   case 8:
      // fall through
   default:
      alert("The end");
      break;
}

You can also (optionally) include a default case, which will be executed if none of the other cases match - if you don't include a default and no cases match then nothing happens. You can (optionally) fall through to the default case.

So in my second example if someVar is 1 it would call someFunction() and then you would see four alerts as it falls through multiple cases some of which have alerts under them. Is someVar is 3, 4 or 5 you'd see two alerts. If someVar is 7 you'd see "Something else" and if it is 8 or any other value you'd see "The end".

2
  • 4
    The //fall through comment make my phpstorm stop warning me about the fall-through switch statement, thanks :)
    – Getz
    Jul 17, 2013 at 8:29
  • You can use return instead of break if the switch is in a function that you call to return some object: switch (action.type) { case ADD: { return newState; } case DELETE: { return newState; } default: { return state; } }
    – Dominika
    Feb 19, 2019 at 21:20
18

You have to switch it!

switch (true) {
    case ( (pageid === "listing-page") || (pageid === ("home-page") ):
        alert("hello");
        break;
    case (pageid === "details-page"):
        alert("goodbye");
        break;
}
2
  • 1
    This method is very innovative :-) I like it for that. But, as it uses more characters than the classic "fall-through", it becomes lesser interesting :) Sep 11, 2018 at 5:20
  • 1
    @AlexLaforge the most weird and ironical that in another stackouverflow question such answer was totally downvoted. But nevertheless i support this answer and agree, that's good solution for flexible conditions. Jun 16, 2019 at 8:15
16

You need to make two case labels.

Control will fall through from the first label to the second, so they'll both execute the same code.

4

Forget switch and break, lets play with if. And instead of asserting

if(pageid === "listing-page" || pageid === "home-page")

lets create several arrays with cases and check it with Array.prototype.includes()

var caseA = ["listing-page", "home-page"];
var caseB = ["details-page", "case04", "case05"];

if(caseA.includes(pageid)) {
    alert("hello");
}
else if (caseB.includes(pageid)) {
    alert("goodbye");
}
else {
    alert("there is no else case");
}
1
  • I think this is not the best solution, specially for perfomance. The .includes is way slower than a switch case, and thus, using if/else. It is best by using the switch case with fall-through. Sep 2, 2020 at 11:02
0

Cleaner way to do that 👌

if (["listing-page", "home-page"].indexOf(pageid) > -1)
    alert("hello");

else if (["exit-page", "logout-page"].indexOf(pageid) > -1)
    alert("Good bye");

You can do that for multiple values with the same result

-9

Use commas to separate case

switch (pageid)
{
    case "listing-page","home-page":
        alert("hello");
        break;
    case "details-page":
        alert("goodbye");
        break;
}
1
  • 2
    The reason why this doesn't work is because case "listing-page","home-page": is equivalent to case "home-page": (because "listing-page","home-page" is just an expression evaluating to "home-page"). Aug 10, 2021 at 14:37

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.