\section case case - conditionally execute a block of commands \subsection case-synopsis Synopsis switch VALUE; [case [WILDCARD...]; [COMMANDS...]; ...] end \subsection case-description Description \c switch performs one of several blocks of commands, depending on whether a specified value equals one of several wildcarded values. \c case is used together with the \c switch statement in order to determine which block should be executed. Each \c case command is given one or more parameters. The first \c case command with a parameter that matches the string specified in the switch command will be evaluated. \c case parameters may contain wildcards. These need to be escaped or quoted in order to avoid regular wildcard expansion using filenames. Note that fish does not fall through on case statements. Only the first matching case is executed. Note that command substitutions in a case statement will be evaluated even if its body is not taken. All substitutions, including command substitutions, must be performed before the value can be compared against the parameter. \subsection case-example Example If the variable \$animal contains the name of an animal, the following code would attempt to classify it:
switch $animal case cat echo evil case wolf dog human moose dolphin whale echo mammal case duck goose albatross echo bird case shark trout stingray echo fish # Note that the next case has a wildcard which is quoted case '*' echo I have no idea what a $animal is endIf the above code was run with \c \$animal set to \c whale, the output would be \c mammal.