453

In my code, the program does something depending on the text entered by the user. My code looks like:

switch (name) {
        case text1: {
            //blah
            break;
        }
        case text2: {
            //blah
            break;
        }
        case text3: {
            //blah
            break;
        }
        case text4: {
            //blah
            break;
        }

However, the code inside cases text1 and text4 is the same. I was therefore wondering if it would be possible for me to implement something like

case text1||text4: {
            //blah
            break;
        }

I know that the || operator won't work in the case statement but is there something similar I can use.

10
  • 54
    Being a basic question makes it if anything more eligable for upvotes if its not a duplicate as its widely useful. And its something that didn't occure to me as possible but now that I realise it its blindingly obvious. So all in all a pretty awesome Q&A Commented May 23, 2013 at 12:58
  • 1
    @RichardTingle - are you familiar with Duff's Device - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duff%27s_device
    – user93353
    Commented May 24, 2013 at 4:25
  • 7
    "Why so many upvotes? Search for "java switch" in the internet and read one of the thousand explanations." <-- what do you think I was doing?
    – Brendan W
    Commented Apr 12, 2016 at 21:52
  • 11
    I literally searched for "multiple cases in one line java" and this Q&A was the first result.
    – domenix
    Commented Sep 5, 2016 at 8:09
  • 1
    The switch demo in the selected answer could be rephrased now that JDK-12 has integrated JEP-325. :)
    – Naman
    Commented Sep 8, 2018 at 18:31

17 Answers 17

818

You can use have both CASE statements as follows.

  case text1: 
  case text4:{
            //blah
            break;
        }

SEE THIS EXAMPLE:The code example calculates the number of days in a particular month:

class SwitchDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        int month = 2;
        int year = 2000;
        int numDays = 0;

        switch (month) {
            case 1:
            case 3:
            case 5:
            case 7:
            case 8:
            case 10:
            case 12:
                numDays = 31;
                break;
            case 4:
            case 6:
            case 9:
            case 11:
                numDays = 30;
                break;
            case 2:
                if (((year % 4 == 0) && 
                     !(year % 100 == 0))
                     || (year % 400 == 0))
                    numDays = 29;
                else
                    numDays = 28;
                break;
            default:
                System.out.println("Invalid month.");
                break;
        }
        System.out.println("Number of Days = "
                           + numDays);
    }
}

This is the output from the code:

Number of Days = 29

FALLTHROUGH:

Another point of interest is the break statement. Each break statement terminates the enclosing switch statement. Control flow continues with the first statement following the switch block. The break statements are necessary because without them, statements in switch blocks fall through: All statements after the matching case label are executed in sequence, regardless of the expression of subsequent case labels, until a break statement is encountered.

EXAMPLE CODE:

public class SwitchFallThrough {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        java.util.ArrayList<String> futureMonths =
            new java.util.ArrayList<String>();

        int month = 8;

        switch (month) {
            case 1:  futureMonths.add("January");
            case 2:  futureMonths.add("February");
            case 3:  futureMonths.add("March");
            case 4:  futureMonths.add("April");
            case 5:  futureMonths.add("May");
            case 6:  futureMonths.add("June");
            case 7:  futureMonths.add("July");
            case 8:  futureMonths.add("August");
            case 9:  futureMonths.add("September");
            case 10: futureMonths.add("October");
            case 11: futureMonths.add("November");
            case 12: futureMonths.add("December");
            default: break;
        }

        if (futureMonths.isEmpty()) {
            System.out.println("Invalid month number");
        } else {
            for (String monthName : futureMonths) {
               System.out.println(monthName);
            }
        }
    }
}

This is the output from the code:

August
September
October
November
December

Using Strings in switch Statements

In Java SE 7 and later, you can use a String object in the switch statement's expression. The following code example, , displays the number of the month based on the value of the String named month:

public class StringSwitchDemo {

    public static int getMonthNumber(String month) {

        int monthNumber = 0;

        if (month == null) {
            return monthNumber;
        }

        switch (month.toLowerCase()) {
            case "january":
                monthNumber = 1;
                break;
            case "february":
                monthNumber = 2;
                break;
            case "march":
                monthNumber = 3;
                break;
            case "april":
                monthNumber = 4;
                break;
            case "may":
                monthNumber = 5;
                break;
            case "june":
                monthNumber = 6;
                break;
            case "july":
                monthNumber = 7;
                break;
            case "august":
                monthNumber = 8;
                break;
            case "september":
                monthNumber = 9;
                break;
            case "october":
                monthNumber = 10;
                break;
            case "november":
                monthNumber = 11;
                break;
            case "december":
                monthNumber = 12;
                break;
            default: 
                monthNumber = 0;
                break;
        }

        return monthNumber;
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        String month = "August";

        int returnedMonthNumber =
            StringSwitchDemo.getMonthNumber(month);

        if (returnedMonthNumber == 0) {
            System.out.println("Invalid month");
        } else {
            System.out.println(returnedMonthNumber);
        }
    }
}

The output from this code is 8.

FROM Java Docs

13
  • 24
    It's worth to mention that this language feature is called fallthrough. Cases without break are basically appended with next case block which is visually below, hence fall through. Commented May 23, 2013 at 7:40
  • @EmperorOrionii i updated my answer as you are suggested.Thanks
    – PSR
    Commented May 23, 2013 at 8:12
  • 5
    @Kobor42 first learn how to talk in public sites.Any how your suggestion is help ful.Thanks
    – PSR
    Commented May 23, 2013 at 16:22
  • 1
    @Kobor42 How about: Why have you used that formatting? Putting cases horisontally makes the code less readable and is generally considered bad practice [Reference optional but desired]. I have always felt that switch statements are a particularly readable format but presented this way they lose all that. Commented May 25, 2013 at 20:11
  • 3
    The switch demo could be rephrased now that JDK-12 has integrated JEP-325. :)
    – Naman
    Commented Sep 8, 2018 at 18:30
63

You can do the following to use multiple cases for one switch statement:

case "firstCase":
case "secondCase": {
    // Run code here for both cases
}
3
  • 1
    for OP: read this also Java switch cases: with or without braces? Commented May 23, 2013 at 6:25
  • 2
    @Xiddoc To answer OP, I used text1 as "firstCase" and text4 as "secondCase" , read the question case text1||text4: { //blah break; }, your edit passed but I orignal answer was simple for OP Commented Jul 20, 2021 at 2:34
  • My bad, I filed another edit to undo the case rename.
    – Xiddoc
    Commented Jul 20, 2021 at 10:34
36

Summary: separate by commas

switch (name) {
    case text1 , text4  -> doX() ;
    case text2          -> doY() ;
    case text3          -> doZ() ;
}

Switch Expressions

With the integration of JEP 361: Switch Expressions in Java 14 and later, one can make use of the new form of the switch label using a comma between multiple values.

case text1, text4 -> {
     //blah
} 

or to rephrase the demo from one of the answers, something like :-

public class RephraseDemo {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        int month = 9;
        int year = 2018;
        int numDays = 0;

        switch (month) {
            case 1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12 ->{
                numDays = 31;
            }
            case 4, 6, 9, 11 ->{
                numDays = 30;
            }
            case 2 ->{
                if (((year % 4 == 0) &&
                        !(year % 100 == 0))
                        || (year % 400 == 0))
                    numDays = 29;
                else
                    numDays = 28;
            }
            default ->{
                System.out.println("Invalid month.");

            }
        }
        System.out.println("Number of Days = " + numDays);
    }
}
1
  • People always mix up arrow labels and switch expressions. Sure they were introduced in the same JEP, but they are orthogonal features. Commented Jan 5, 2022 at 3:38
32

The case values are just codeless "goto" points that can share the same entry point:

case text1:
case text4: 
    //blah
    break;

Note that the braces are redundant.

0
25

Just do

case text1: case text4: 
     do stuff;
     break;
9

The brackets are unnecessary. Just do

case text1:
case text4:
  doSomethingHere();
  break;
case text2:
  doSomethingElse()
  break;

If anyone is curious, this is called a case fallthrough. The ability to do this is the reason why break; is necessary to end case statements. For more information, see the wikipedia article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switch_statement.

8

Fall through approach is the best one i feel.

case text1:
case text4: {
        //Yada yada
        break;
} 
7

You can use:

case text1: case text4: 
     do stuff;
     break;
5

The case values are just codeless "goto" points that can share the same entry point:

case text1:
case text4: {
//Do something
break;
}

Note that the braces are redundant.

4

The fallthrough answers by others are good ones.

However another approach would be extract methods out of the contents of your case statements and then just call the appropriate method from each case.

In the example below, both case 'text1' and case 'text4' behave the same:

switch (name) {
        case text1: {
            method1();
            break;
        }
        case text2: {
            method2();
            break;
        }
        case text3: {
            method3();
            break;
        }
        case text4: {
            method1();
            break;
        }

I personally find this style of writing case statements more maintainable and slightly more readable, especially when the methods you call have good descriptive names.

2
  • 1
    It is not more maintainable if text1 and text4 will ALMOST CERTAINLY do the same thing, regardless of a future change. If they should always be linked, making a change in the case for text1 (meaning changing which method it calls) would require a change in text4. In this case it is obviously not more maintainable. It depends on the situation. Commented May 23, 2013 at 21:49
  • 1
    I will say that this method should probably be combined with the other way anyway, since switch statements are not (IMHO) the prettiest programming structure. Commented May 23, 2013 at 22:02
3

JEP 354: Switch Expressions (Preview) in JDK-13 and JEP 361: Switch Expressions (Standard) in JDK-14 will extend the switch statement so it can be used as an expression.

Now you can:

  • directly assign variable from switch expression,
  • use new form of switch label (case L ->):

    The code to the right of a "case L ->" switch label is restricted to be an expression, a block, or (for convenience) a throw statement.

  • use multiple constants per case, separated by commas,
  • and also there are no more value breaks:

    To yield a value from a switch expression, the break with value statement is dropped in favor of a yield statement.

So the demo from one of the answers might look like this:

public class SwitchExpression {

  public static void main(String[] args) {
      int month = 9;
      int year = 2018;
      int numDays = switch (month) {
        case 1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12 -> 31;
        case 4, 6, 9, 11 -> 30;
        case 2 -> {
          if (java.time.Year.of(year).isLeap()) {
            System.out.println("Wow! It's leap year!");
            yield 29;
          } else {
            yield 28;
          }
        }
        default -> {
          System.out.println("Invalid month.");
          yield 0;
        }
      };
      System.out.println("Number of Days = " + numDays);
  }
}

1
  • This Answer repeats another posted a couple of years prior. Commented Jan 5, 2022 at 3:31
3

Java 12 and above

switch (name) {
    case text1, text4 -> // do something ;
    case text2, text3, text 5 -> // do something else ;
    default -> // default case ;
}

You can also assign a value through the switch case expression :

String text = switch (name) {
    case text1, text4 -> "hello" ;
    case text2, text3, text5 -> "world" ;
    default -> "goodbye";
};

"yield" keyword

It allows you to return a value by the switch case expression

String text = switch (name) {
    case text1, text4 ->
        yield "hello";
    case text2, text3, text5 ->
        yield "world";
    default ->
        yield "goodbye";
};
0
2

A more beautiful way to handle that

if (["Joe", "Peterson", "Bond" ].indexOf(name) > -1)

    //Do something

else if (["Joe", "Peterson", "Bond" ].indexOf(name) > -1)

    //Do other  ...

You can do that for multiple values with the same result

2

if you just add a : then every case will run the same code block until you get to the first break. so in this case 123, 456 have the same execution. Be sure to include the break and if you add code for 123 and 456 with no break then both code blocks will be ran. this may or may not be the case for Java but in JavaScript you open {} whenever you have scoped variables that you need to define inside the case otherwise they leak/break through to the other cases.

    case '123':
    case '456': //some code
         break;
    case '789' {
    /// some code
         break;
}  
 default break;
1

Another variation?

  switch (name) {
    case ['text1', 'text2']:
      // do something
      break
    case 'text3':
      // do something
      break
    default:
      // do something
      break
  }
0

If you are using and enum you can just sparate them with comma and you ready to go...

switch (xyzEnum) {
        case x, y -> {
            //Do stuff
        }
        case x -> {
            //Do stuff
        }
    }
-2

you can also do this

let date = new Date().getDay();
switch (date) {
  case 0: console.log("domingo"); break;
  case 1: console.log("segunda"); break;
  case 2: console.log("terça"); break;
  case 3: console.log("quarta"); break;
  case 4: console.log("quinta"); break;
  case 5: console.log("sexta"); break;
  case 6: console.log("sábado"); break;
  default: console.log("dia inválido");
}
1
  • Welcome to Stack Overflow! Please edit your answer to provide more information as to how the code you've provided works, what you have changed, etc. Code-only answers might solve the problem of the original asker but they don't help future readers understand the solution.
    – LW001
    Commented Sep 2, 2021 at 14:56

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