I’m having a problem using a mathematical operator in a switch expression.
This is what my code currently looks like:
var x = 18;
var y = 82;
var result = x + y;
switch(result) {
case "200":
document.write("200!");
break;
case "500":
document.write("500!");
break;
case "100":
document.write("100! :)");
break;
default:
document.write("Something's not right..");
}
Explained: the variable “result” has a value of 100. I am trying to use that value with the switch operator, but it just isn’t working.
I’ve also tried using the equation itself as the switch expression, but that doesn’t work either.
P.S: I just started out with JavaScript. Bet I missed something obvious…
Change "100" to 100 and it works. switch must be using the semantics of
===which means ‘type and value are equal’ vs==, which will try to make the types similar and then compare.EDIT — here is a screenshot showing it working