Limbo does not have a verbatim switch
statement. Rather, it has a statement named case
which is analogous, but not identical to C's switch-case construct.
This segment exemplifies a few features of limbo's case statement. There is an iterative loop wrapped around a case statement which has a boolean or
'd section and a default section, indicated by the wildcard *
operator.
Limbo case statements break by default and accept range matching operations involving the or
and to
keywords.
A break or continue followed by a label causes a break out of, or the next iteration of, the enclosing construct that is labeled with the same label.
This case statement demonstrates the use of the to
range operator in a given section while providing a specific section to match the C
character as well.
Limbo is able to switch on string values, this can include a nil
check, demonstrated by the ""
section. Note that there is no default section provided. The default section is not mandatory.
This case verifies whether a value is 0
or 1
to determine if a value is binary.
The valid types for case statements include: int
, string
, and big
.
Note that the big
coercion statement is mandatory.
; limbo switch.b
; switch
Even
Odd
i's value: 9
Valid hex
Quack!
This is binary
Neither 4 nor 7
;
- Try commenting out the
break
and/orcontinue
keywords in the first switch, how does the behavior change? - Change the variable
c
to equal'C'
, what's printed?