The switch statement is used to process commands depending on the value of a variable. When you need to handle more than three choices, switch is a useful alternative to an if-then-else statement.
If the string
variable matches pattern1
,
the first set of commands
is executed; if string
matches pattern2
, the second set of commands
is executed;
and so on. If no patterns match, execute commands
under the
default:
case.
string
can be specified using
command substitution (9.16),
variable substitution (6.8),
or
filename expansion (1.16).
Patterns can be specified using the pattern-matching symbols *
, ?
, and
[]
. breaksw
is used to exit the switch
after commands
are executed. If breaksw
is omitted (which is rarely done),
the switch
continues to execute another set of commands
until
it reaches a breaksw
or endsw
.
Below is the general syntax of switch, side by side with an example that processes the first command-line argument.
switch (string
) switch ($argv[1]) casepattern1
: case -[nN]:commands
nroff $file | lp breaksw breaksw casepattern2
: case -[Pp]:commands
pr $file | lp breaksw breaksw casepattern3
: case -[Mm]:commands
more $file breaksw breaksw . case -[Ss]: . sort $file . breaksw default: default:commands
echo "Error-no such option" exit 1 breaksw breaksw endsw endsw
- from O'Reilly & Associates' UNIX in a Nutshell (SVR4/Solaris)