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Branching with if and else in Go is straight-forward.
if
else
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
Here’s a basic example.
if 7%2 == 0 { fmt.Println("7 is even") } else { fmt.Println("7 is odd") }
You can have an if statement without an else.
if 8%4 == 0 { fmt.Println("8 is divisible by 4") }
Logical operators like && and || are often useful in conditions.
&&
||
if 8%2 == 0 || 7%2 == 0 { fmt.Println("either 8 or 7 are even") }
A statement can precede conditionals; any variables declared in this statement are available in the current and all subsequent branches.
if num := 9; num < 0 { fmt.Println(num, "is negative") } else if num < 10 { fmt.Println(num, "has 1 digit") } else { fmt.Println(num, "has multiple digits") } }
Note that you don’t need parentheses around conditions in Go, but that the braces are required.
$ go run if-else.go 7 is odd 8 is divisible by 4 either 8 or 7 are even 9 has 1 digit
There is no ternary if in Go, so you’ll need to use a full if statement even for basic conditions.
Next example: Switch .