# Design Doc: Switch ## Background Many programming languages provide `switch` as a generalization of `if-elif-else`. We want to add it to Fluid. The following example shows the usage of `fluid.switch`. ```python a = fluid.Var(10) b = fluid.Var(0) with switch() as switch: with switch.case(fluid.less_equal(a, 10)): fluid.print("Case 1") with switch.case(fluid.larger(a, 0)): fluid.print("Case 2") with switch.default(): fluid.print("Case 3") ``` ## The Semantics 1. A `switch` control-flow checks cases one-by-one. 1. The condition of each case is a boolean value, which is a scalar, and differs from the `fluid.if_else` control-flow, which condition could be a vector of boolean values. 1. It runs the first matched case, or the default case if there is one. 1. Once it matches a case, it runs the corresponding branch and only that branch. It's like there is a C's `break` keyword at the end of each case. The above program should print and print only "Case 1". The implementation of the backward pass of the `switch` control-flow is easier than the backward of the `if_else`, because `switch` runs at most one branch, whereas `if-else` could run more than one branches.