IfOp should have only one branch. An IfOp operator takes a `cond` variable whose value must be a vector of N boolean elements. Its return value has M (M<=N) instances, each corresponds to a true element in `cond`. ```python import paddle as pd x = var() y = var() cond = var() b = pd.create_ifop_builder(inputs=[x], output_num=1) with b.true_block(): x = b.inputs(0) z = operator.add(x, y) b.set_output(0, operator.softmax(z)) out = b(cond) ``` If we want the output still has N instances, we can use IfElseOp with a default value, whose minibatch size must be N: ```python import paddle as pd x = var() y = var() cond = var() default_value = var() b = pd.create_ifelseop_builder(inputs=[x], output_num=1) with b.true_block(): x = b.inputs(0) z = operator.add(x, y) b.set_output(0, operator.softmax(z)) with b.false_block(): x = b.inputs(0) z = layer.fc(x) b.set_output(0, operator.softmax(z)) out = b(cond) ``` If only true_block is set in an IfElseOp, we can have a default value for false as: ```python import paddle as pd x = var() y = var() cond = var() default_value = var() b = pd.create_ifelseop_builder(inputs=[x], output_num=1, default_value) with b.true_block(): x = b.inputs(0) z = operator.add(x, y) b.set_output(0, operator.softmax(z)) out = b(cond) ``` where default_value is a list of vars for `cond` == False.