The switch
statement should be used only to clearly define some new branches in the control flow. As soon as a when
clause contains too many statements this highly decreases the readability of the overall control flow statement. In such case, the content of the
when
clause should be extracted into a dedicated function.
Noncompliant code example
With the threshold set at 5
:
public void foo(Integer value) {
switch on value {
when 1 {
methodCall1('');
methodCall2('');
methodCall3('');
methodCall4('');
methodCall5('');
}
when 2 { /* ... */ }
}
}
Compliant solution
public void foo(Integer value) {
switch on value {
when 1 { doSomething(); }
when 2 { /* ... */ }
}
}
}
private void doSomething() {
methodCall1('');
methodCall2('');
methodCall3('');
methodCall4('');
methodCall5('');
}