Option 1 - switch using return:
function myFunction(opt)
{
switch (opt)
{
case 1: return "One";
case 2: return "Two";
case 3: return "Three";
default: return "";
}
}
Option 2 - switch using break:
function myFunction(opt)
{
var retVal = "";
switch (opt)
{
case 1:
retVal = "One";
break;
case 2:
retVal = "Two";
break;
case 3:
retVal = "Three";
break;
}
return retVal;
}
I know that both work, but is one more of a best practice? I tend to like Option 1 - switch using return best, as it's cleaner and simpler.
Here is a jsFiddle of my specific example using the technique mentioned in @ic3b3rg's comments:
var SFAIC = {};
SFAIC.common =
{
masterPages:
{
cs: "CS_",
cp: "CP_"
},
contentPages:
{
cs: "CSContent_",
cp: "CPContent_"
}
};
function getElementPrefix(page)
{
return (page in SFAIC.common.masterPages)
? SFAIC.common.masterPages[page]
: (page in SFAIC.common.contentPages)
? SFAIC.common.contentPages[page]
: undefined;
}
To call the function, I would do so in the following ways:
getElementPrefix(SFAIC.common.masterPages.cs);
getElementPrefix(SFAIC.common.masterPages.cp);
getElementPrefix(SFAIC.common.contentPages.cs);
getElementPrefix(SFAIC.common.contentPages.cp);
Problem here is that it always returns undefined. I'm guessing that it's because it's passing in the actual value of the object literal and not the property. What would I do to fix this using the technique described in @ic3b3rg's comments?