Thanks Andreas, There might be some other advantages to my example:
The order of the results in the array (a, b, c…) can easily be modified without having to get into the logic. And, you could also increase/decrease the amount of affecting variables (value1, value2, etc.) without spending too much time redoing the conditionals. Using a table as in my example might also be very helpful to know the results depending on the values of the different variables, which might be easier to understand than a long switch conditional. On 1/26/06, Andreas Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Ok, ok I'm clearly outnumbered here - waving white flag :-) > > And the approach Daniel demonstraded (similar to what Martin outlined) is > indeed very elegant and succint. > > When the actions to take (depending on which combination 'is the case') are > rather complex, requiring several lines of code, imo the immediately > readable 'string-based' switch still has its merits in terms of > readability/managability, but I won't insist - up to Eric to pick the one > that best matches the needs of his project. > > Cheers! > -------------- > Andreas Weber > motiondraw.com -- Daniel Cascais Tel: +56 (0)2 4589495 Cel: +56 (0)9 9417355
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