if

if .. then .. else .., ternary operator

The ternary operator if-then-else takes a Boolean as first argument, and two identically typed values as second and third arguments. The resulting syntax if c then a else b is treated as an expression.

table T = with
  [| as A, as B, as C |]
  [| 1,    0,    true |]
  [| 2,    3,    false |]
  [| 4,    5,    false |]

show table "" a1d3 with
  T.A
  T.B
  T.C
  if T.C then T.A else T.B

In many languages (C, C++, Java, C#, ..), the ternary operator is written condition ? if_true : if_false.

A multi-line syntax is also available. The else keywords are indented (relative to the first line), and the expressions are further indented (relative to the else keywords):

a = 42
x = if random.binomial(0.5) then
      a + 1
    else if random.binomial(0.5) then
      a + 2
    else
      a + 3

show scalar "x" with x

For aesthetic reasons, it is recommended to align the else vertically with the first if, though that is not required.

if .. else .., branch statement

The if statement introduces a branch block within a user-defined function.

def pure mySwap(x: number, y: number) with
  a = 0
  b = 0
  if x > y
    a = y
    b = x
  else if x == y
    a = x
    b = x
  else
    a = x
    b = y
  return (a, b)

x, y = mySwap(4, 2)

show summary "" a1b1 with x, y

It is also possible to place return statements within the branches.

def pure mySwap(x: number, y: number) with
  if x > y
    return (y, x)
  else if x == y
    return (x, x)
  else
    return (x, y)

x, y = mySwap(4, 2)

show summary "" a1b1 with x, y

The if statement is not allowed outside the declaration of user-defined functions.

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