Basic Pascal Tutorial/Chapter 3/IF
│
български (bg) │
English (en) │
français (fr) │
日本語 (ja) │
中文(中国大陆) (zh_CN) │
Back to Reserved words.
3Ca - IF (author: Tao Yue, state: changed)
The IF statement allows you to branch based on the result of a Boolean operation.
Format
- IF expression THEN
- statemrnt1
- [ ELSE
- statement2]
Where
- expression is any comparison, constant or function which returns a boolen value, and
- statement1 and statement2 are either a single statement, a Begin-end block, a repeat-until block, or the null statement.
The ELSE clause is optional.
There are two ways to use an IF statement, a one-way branch or a two-way branch/
One-way branch
The one-way branch format is:
if BooleanExpression then
StatementIfTrue;
If the Boolean expression evaluates to true, the statement executes. Otherwise, it is skipped.
The IF statement accepts only one statement. If you would like to use a compound statement, you must use a begin-end frame to enclose the statements:
if BooleanExpression then
begin
Statement1;
Statement2;
end;
Two-way branch
There is also a two-way selection:
if BooleanExpression then
StatementIfTrue
else
StatementIfFalse;
Note there is never a semicolon ; immediately before the else.
if BooleanExpression then
begin
Statement1; // semicolon here is mandatory
Statement2; // semicolon here is optional
end // semicolon here is forbidden
else
begin
Statement3;
Statement4;
end;
If the Boolean expression evaluates to FALSE, the statement following the else will be performed. Note that you may never use a semicolon after the statement preceding the else. That causes the computer to treat it as a one-way selection, leaving it to wonder where the else came from. And when a compiler wonders, it usually gets mad and throws a tantrum, or rather, it throws an error
If you need multi-way selection, simply nest if statements:
if Condition1 then
Statement1
else
if Condition2 then
Statement2
else
Statement3;
Be careful with nesting. Sometimes the computer won't do what you want it to do:
if Condition1 then
if Condition2 then
Statement2
else
Statement1;
The else is always matched with the most recent if, so the computer interprets the preceding block of code as:
if Condition1 then
if Condition2 then
Statement2
else
Statement1;
You can get by with a null statement:
if Condition1 then
if Condition2 then
Statement2
else
else
Statement1;
Or you could use a begin-end block.
The following proves a semicolon is absolutely forbidden before an else:
// Paul Robinson 2020-12-16
// Compiler test program Err03.pas
// tests the proposition that ; is
// never legal before ELSE
program err03;
Var
Test,test2: Boolean;
Begin
Test := True;
Test2 := true;
if test then
if test2 then
Writeln('Reached Part 1'); // semi-colon here should be illegal
else
Writeln('Reached Part 2');
end.
But the best way to clean up the code would be to rewrite the condition.
if not Condition1 then
Statement1
else
if Condition2 then
Statement2;
This example illustrates where the not operator comes in very handy. If Condition1 had been a Boolean like: (not(a < b) or (c + 3 > 6)) and g, reversing the expression would be more difficult than NOTting it.
Also notice how important indentation is to convey the logic of program code to a human, but the compiler ignores the indentation.