I’ve been wondering this for some time now. I’m by far not a hardcore programmer, mainly small Python scripts and I’ve written a couple molecular dynamics simulations. For the real question: What is the point of the switch statement? Why can’t you just use the if-else statement?
Thanks for your answer and if this has been asked before please point me to the link.
EDIT
S.Lott has pointed out that this may be a duplicate of questions If/Else vs. Switch. If you want to close then do so. I’ll leave it open for further discussion.
A switch construct is more easily translated into a jump (or branch) table. This can make switch statements much more efficient than if-else when the case labels are close together. The idea is to place a bunch of jump instructions sequentially in memory and then add the value to the program counter. This replaces a sequence of comparison instructions with an add operation.
Below are some extremely simplified psuedo-assembly examples. First, the if-else version:
Next is the switch version:
You can see that the resulting assembly code is much more compact. Note that the value would need to be transformed in some way to handle other values than 1, 2 and 3. However, this should illustrate the concept.