Switch Statement

The switch statement allows matching on literal values.

switch calc_secret_value(x) {
    1 => print("It's one!"),
    2 => {
        // A statements block instead of a one-line statement
        print("It's two!");
        print("Again!");
    }
    3 => print("Go!"),
    // A list of alternatives
    4 | 5 | 6 => print("Some small number!"),
    // _ is the default when no case matches. It must be the last case.
    _ => print(`Oops! Something's wrong: ${x}`)
}

Default Case

A default case (i.e. when no other cases match) can be specified with _.

Must be last

The default case must be the last case in the switch statement.

switch wrong_default {
    1 => 2,
    _ => 9,     // <- syntax error: default case not the last
    2 => 3,
    3 => 4,     // <- ending with extra comma is OK
}

switch wrong_default {
    1 => 2,
    2 => 3,
    3 => 4,
    _ => 8,     // <- syntax error: default case not the last
    _ => 9
}

Array and Object Map Literals Also Work

The switch expression can match against any literal, including array and object map literals.

// Match on arrays
switch [foo, bar, baz] {
    ["hello", 42, true] => ...,
    ["hello", 123, false] => ...,
    ["world", 1, true] => ...,
    _ => ...
}

// Match on object maps
switch map {
    #{ a: 1, b: 2, c: true } => ...,
    #{ a: 42, d: "hello" } => ...,
    _ => ...
}

Case Conditions

Similar to Rust, each case (except the default case at the end) can provide an optional condition that must evaluate to true in order for the case to match.

All cases are checked in order, so an earlier case that matches will override all later cases.

let result = switch calc_secret_value(x) {
    1 if some_external_condition(x, y, z) => 100,

    1 | 2 | 3 if x < foo => 200,    // <- all alternatives share the same condition
    
    2 if bar() => 999,

    2 => "two",                     // <- fallback value for 2

    2 => "dead code",               // <- this case is a duplicate and will never match
                                    //    because the previous case matches first

    5 if CONDITION => 123,          // <- value for 5 matching condition

    5 => "five",                    // <- fallback value for 5

    _ if CONDITION => 8888          // <- syntax error: default case cannot have condition
};

Tip: Use with type_of()

Case conditions, together with type_of(), makes it extremely easy to work with values which may be of several different types (like properties in a JSON object).

switch value.type_of() {
    // if 'value' is a string...
    "string" if value.len() < 5 => ...,
    "string" => ...,

    // if 'value' is an array...
    "array" => ...,

    // if 'value' is an object map...
    "map" if value.prop == 42 => ...,
    "map" => ...,

    // if 'value' is a number...
    "i64" if value > 0 => ...,
    "i64" => ...,

    // anything else: probably an error...
    _ => ...
}

Range Cases

Because of their popularity, literal integer ranges can also be used as switch cases.

Numeric ranges are only searched when the switch value is itself a number (including floating-point and decimal). They never match any other data types.

Must come after numeric cases

Range cases must come after all numeric cases.

let x = 42;

switch x {
    'x' => ...,             // no match: wrong data type

    1 => ...,               // <- specific numeric cases are checked first
    2 => ...,               // <- but these do not match

    0..50 if x > 45 => ..., // no match: condition is 'false'

    -10..20 => ...,         // no match: not in range

    0..50 => ...,           // <- MATCH!!! duplicated range cases are OK

    30..100 => ...,         // no match: even though it is within range,
                            // the previous case matches first

    42 => ...,              // <- syntax error: numeric cases cannot follow range cases
}

Tip: Ranges can overlap

When more then one range contain the switch value, the first one with a fulfilled condition (if any) is evaluated.

Numeric range cases are tried in the order that they appear in the original script.

Switch Expression

Like if, switch also works as an expression.

Tip

This means that a switch expression can appear anywhere a regular expression can, e.g. as function call arguments.

let x = switch foo { 1 => true, _ => false };

func(switch foo {
    "hello" => 42,
    "world" => 123,
    _ => 0
});

// The above is somewhat equivalent to:

let x = if foo == 1 { true } else { false };

if foo == "hello" {
    func(42);
} else if foo == "world" {
    func(123);
} else {
    func(0);
}

Difference From if-else if Chain

Although a switch expression looks almost the same as an if-else if chain, there are subtle differences between the two.

Look-up Table vs x == y

A switch expression matches through hashing via a look-up table. Therefore, matching is very fast. Walking down an if-else if chain is much slower.

On the other hand, operators can be overloaded in Rhai, meaning that it is possible to override the == operator for integers such that x == y returns a different result from the built-in default.

switch expressions do not use the == operator for comparison; instead, they hash the data values and jump directly to the correct statements via a pre-compiled look-up table. This makes matching extremely efficient, but it also means that overloading the == operator will have no effect.

Therefore, in environments where it is desirable to overload the == operator for standard types – though it is difficult to think of valid scenarios where you’d want 1 == 1 to return something other than true – avoid using the switch expression.

Efficiency

Because the switch expression works through a look-up table, it is very efficient even for large number of cases; in fact, switching is an O(1) operation regardless of the size of the data and number of cases to match.

A long if-else if chain becomes increasingly slower with each additional case because essentially an O(n) linear scan is performed.