Your first example is simply wrong. You need elseif
instead of just else
.
If you use if..elseif...
or switch
is mainly a matter of preference. The performance is the same.
However, if all your conditions are of the type x == value
with x
being the same in every condition, switch
usually makes sense. I'd also only use switch
if there are more than e.g. two conditions.
A case where switch
actually gives you a performance advantage is if the variable part is a function call:
switch(some_func()) {
case 1: ... break;
case 2: ... break;
}
Then some_func()
is only called once while with
if(some_func() == 1) {}
elseif(some_func() == 2) {}
it would be called twice - including possible side-effects of the function call happening twice. However, you could always use $res = some_func();
and then use $res
in your if
conditions - so you can avoid this problem alltogether.
A case where you cannot use switch at all is when you have more complex conditions - switch
only works for x == y
with y
being a constant value.
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