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Home/ Questions/Q 478703
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T00:43:06+00:00 2026-05-13T00:43:06+00:00

I recently discovered that you can conditionally assign a value with an if-else block.

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I recently discovered that you can conditionally assign a value with an if-else block.

y <- if(condition) 1 else 2

I realise that the use case for this is limited: if you have vectorised code, you would use the ifelse function instead. There is a performance benefit: if-else runs about 35x faster than ifelse in the scalar case on my machine (though you need to call it millions of times to notice much of a difference).

What is bugging me is that I can’t work out why this code works—I was amazed that it doesn’t just throw an error.

Another example suggests that if blocks behave like functions—they automatically return the last value in the block (though you can’t use a return statement in them).

y <- if(TRUE) 
{
   y <- 3
   4
}    # y is 4

Based on this, I guessed that maybe another environment was created when you entered an if block, but this doesn’t seem to be the case.

if(TRUE) sys.frames()    # NULL

Can anyone tell me what is happening under the hood, please?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T00:43:07+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:43 am

    Let me focus on

    What is bugging me is that I can’t
    work out why this code works—I was
    amazed that it doesn’t just throw an
    error.

    Why do you think so? What happens is that we have

    1. y being assigned an expression
    2. that expression being an if if() ...
    3. leading to either a TRUE or FALSE in the test
    4. leading to either one of the two branches being entered
    5. leading to the respective code being evaluated
    6. leading to its final value being the value of the right-hand-side
    7. leading to this value being assigned to y

    Seems logical to me.

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