Go if: Difference between revisions
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
=<tt>if</tt> with Initialization Statement= | =<tt>if</tt> with Initialization Statement= | ||
<code>if</code> accepts an initialization statement before the expression, which is commonly used to set up '''local variables''' that are then used in the expression, and are accessible in the subsequent <code>if</code>, <code>else</code> and <code>else if</code> | <code>if</code> accepts an initialization statement before the expression, which is commonly used to set up '''local variables''' that are then used in the expression, and are accessible in the subsequent [[Go_Language#if,_for,_switch_Blocks|<code>if</code>, <code>else</code> and <code>else if</code> blocks]]: | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'> | <syntaxhighlight lang='go'> | ||
if <initialization-statement>; <expression> { | if <initialization-statement>; <expression> { |
Revision as of 01:08, 6 July 2024
External
Internal
Overview
The if
statement specifies the conditional execution of one, two or more branches according to the value of boolean expressions. Optionally, the boolean expression may be preceded by an initialization statement, which is executed before the expression is evaluated.
The statements to be executed must aways be encoded in braces. Mandatory braces encourage writing simple if
statements on multiple lines.
Simple if
if <expression> {
<statements>
}
if x > 5 {
println(x)
}
Note that because the lexer automatically inserts a semicolon after each token that may represent the end of statement, if it is followed by newline, we always must provide the opening brace on the same line as the expression.
if with Initialization Statement
if
accepts an initialization statement before the expression, which is commonly used to set up local variables that are then used in the expression, and are accessible in the subsequent if
, else
and else if
blocks:
if <initialization-statement>; <expression> {
<statements>
}
if a := compute(); a > 0 {
fmt.Println("positive " + a)
} else {
fmt.Println("negative " + a)
}
The local variables declared in the initialization statement are only accessible in the expression and the subsequent if blocks.
This syntax supports the Go error handling idiom that relies on functions returning errors as result value:
var result ...
var err error
if result, err = someFunc(); err != nil {
// handle error
return
}
// handle success
...
Avoid else
in the idiom above. Do NOT write this:
if result, err := someFunc(); err {
// handle error
...
} else { // BAD, avoid the "else"
// handle success
...
}
If/else
if <condition> {
<statements>
} else {
<statements>
}
if x > 5 {
println(x)
} else {
println("something else")
}
If/else if/else
if <condition> {
<statements>
} else if <condition> {
<statements>
} else {
<statements>
}
if x < 5 {
println(x)
} else if x == 5 {
println("is 5")
} else {
println("something else")
}