PHP Basic
PHP HOMEPHP Intro
PHP Install
PHP Syntax
PHP Variables
PHP String
PHP Operators
PHP If...Else
PHP Switch
PHP Arrays
PHP While Loops
PHP For Loops
PHP Functions
PHP Forms
PHP $_GET
PHP $_POST
PHP Advanced
PHP DatePHP Include
PHP File
PHP File Upload
PHP Cookies
PHP Sessions
PHP E-mail
PHP Secure E-mail
PHP Error
PHP Exception
PHP Filter
PHP Database
MySQL IntroductionMySQL Connect
MySQL Create
MySQL Insert
MySQL Select
MySQL Where
MySQL Order By
MySQL Update
MySQL Delete
PHP ODBC
PHP XML
XML Expat ParserXML DOM
XML SimpleXML
PHP and AJAX
AJAX IntroAJAX PHP
AJAX Database
AJAX XML
AJAX Live Search
AJAX RSS Reader
AJAX Poll
PHP Reference
PHP ArrayPHP Calendar
PHP Date
PHP Directory
PHP Error
PHP Filesystem
PHP Filter
PHP FTP
PHP HTTP
PHP Libxml
PHP Mail
PHP Math
PHP Misc
PHP MySQL
PHP SimpleXML
PHP String
PHP XML
PHP Zip
PHP Quiz
PHP QuizPHP Certificate
PHP Switch Statement
| « Previous | Next Chapter » |
Conditional statements are used to perform different actions based on different conditions.
The PHP Switch Statement
Use the switch statement to select one of many blocks of code to be executed.
Syntax
| switch (n) { case label1: code to be executed if n=label1; break; case label2: code to be executed if n=label2; break; default: code to be executed if n is different from both label1 and label2; } |
This is how it works: First we have a single expression n (most often a variable), that is evaluated once. The value of the expression is then compared with the values for each case in the structure. If there is a match, the block of code associated with that case is executed. Use break to prevent the code from running into the next case automatically. The default statement is used if no match is found.
Example
| <html> <body> <?php switch ($x) { case 1: echo "Number 1"; break; case 2: echo "Number 2"; break; case 3: echo "Number 3"; break; default: echo "No number between 1 and 3"; } ?> </body> </html> |
| « Previous | Next Chapter » |
