Expression.Switch Method (Expression, SwitchCase())
[ This article is for Windows Phone 8 developers. If you’re developing for Windows 10, see the latest documentation. ]
Creates a SwitchExpression that represents a switch statement without a default case.
Assembly: System.Core (in System.Core.dll)
'Declaration Public Shared Function Switch ( _ switchValue As Expression, _ ParamArray cases As SwitchCase() _ ) As SwitchExpression
Parameters
- switchValue
- Type: System.Linq.Expressions.Expression
The value to be tested against each case.
- cases
- Type:
System.Linq.Expressions.SwitchCase
()
The set of cases for this switch expression.
All SwitchCase objects in a SwitchExpression object must have the same type, unless the SwitchExpression has the type void.
Each SwitchCase object has an implicit break statement, which means that there is no implicit fall through from one case label to another.
If switchValue does not match any of the cases, no exception is thrown.
The following example demonstrates how to create an expression that represents a swtich statement without a default case.
' Add the following directive to the file: ' Imports System.Linq.Expressions ' An expression that represents the switch value. Dim switchValue As ConstantExpression = Expression.Constant(2) ' This expression represents a switch statement ' without a default case. Dim switchExpr As SwitchExpression = Expression.Switch( switchValue, New SwitchCase() { Expression.SwitchCase( Expression.Call( Nothing, GetType(Console).GetMethod("WriteLine", New Type() {GetType(String)}), Expression.Constant("First") ), Expression.Constant(1) ), Expression.SwitchCase( Expression.Call( Nothing, GetType(Console).GetMethod("WriteLine", New Type() {GetType(String)}), Expression.Constant("Second") ), Expression.Constant(2) ) } ) ' The following statement first creates an expression tree, ' then compiles it, and then runs it. Expression.Lambda(Of Action)(switchExpr).Compile()() ' This code example produces the following output: ' ' Second