Conditional if
Expressions
An if
expression specifies that some code should only be evaluated if a certain condition is true.
For example:
if (x > 5) x = x - 5
The condition must be an expression of type bool
.
An if
expression can optionally include an else
clause to specify another expression to evaluate
when the condition is false.
if (y <= 10) y = y + 1 else y = 10
Either the "true" branch or the "false" branch will be evaluated, but not both. Either branch can be a single expression or an expression block.
The conditional expressions may produce values so that the if
expression has a result.
let z = if (x < 100) x else 100;
The expressions in the true and false branches must have compatible types. For example:
// x and y must be u64 integers
let maximum: u64 = if (x > y) x else y;
// ERROR! branches different types
let z = if (maximum < 10) 10u8 else 100u64;
// ERROR! branches different types, as default false-branch is () not u64
if (maximum >= 10) maximum;
If the else
clause is not specified, the false branch defaults to the unit value. The following
are equivalent:
if (condition) true_branch // implied default: else ()
if (condition) true_branch else ()
Commonly, if
expressions are used in conjunction with
expression blocks.
let maximum = if (x > y) x else y;
if (maximum < 10) {
x = x + 10;
y = y + 10;
} else if (x >= 10 && y >= 10) {
x = x - 10;
y = y - 10;
}
Grammar for Conditionals
if-expression → if ( expression ) expression else-clauseopt > else-clause → else expression