1.4 KiB
If-Else statement
An if-else statement lets you specify which portions to code the interpreter must run based on the result of an expression.
The syntax of an if-else statement is the following:
if condition: {
# Executed when the condition is true
} else {
# Executed when the condition is false
}
The condition may be any type of expression, but must evaluate to a boolean type. No implicit casts are performed.
When the else block is empty, in can me omitted:
if condition: {
# Executed when the condition is true
}
If the blocks only contain one statement, it's possible to omit the curly brackets:
if condition:
doSomething();
else
doSomethingElse();
If-else chains
Since curly brackets can be dropped for blocks with only one statement, the following code:
if cond0: {
doSomething();
} else {
if cond1: {
doSomethingElse();
} else {
doSomethingDumb();
}
}
can be simplified to
if cond0: {
doSomething();
} else if cond1: {
doSomethingElse();
} else {
doSomethingDumb();
}
creating a chain of if-else statements.
Compound statements
Actually the meaning of the curly brackets is to group multiple statements into one.
The if-else statement expects only one statement for each branch, though it's possible to provide more than one statement each by wrapping them into curly brackets.