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// Copyright (c) 2022, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file
// for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
// BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
/// @assertion
/// primary ::= // Existing productions...
/// | switchExpression
///
/// switchExpression ::= 'switch' '(' expression ')' '{'
/// switchExpressionCase ( ',' switchExpressionCase )*
/// ','? '}'
/// switchExpressionCase ::= guardedPattern '=>' expression
///
/// The body is a series of cases. Each case has a pattern, optional guard, and
/// a single expression body. As with other expression forms containing a list
/// of subelements (argument lists, collection literals), the cases are
/// separated by commas with an optional trailing comma. Since the body of each
/// case is a single expression with a known terminator, it's easy to tell when
/// one case ends and the next begins. That lets us do away with the case
/// keyword.
///
/// To keep the syntax small and light, we also disallow a default clause.
/// Instead, you can use a shorter _ wildcard pattern to catch any remaining
/// values.
///
/// Slotting into primary means it can be used anywhere any expression can
/// appear, even as operands to unary and binary operators. Many of these uses
/// are ugly, but not any more problematic than using a collection literal in
/// the same context since a switch expression is always delimited by a switch
/// and }.
///
/// @description Check that switch expressions can be used as operands of shift
/// operators
/// @author sgrekhov22@gmail.com
import "../../Utils/expect.dart";
int test1(String s1, String s2) =>
switch (s1) {
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
_ => 0
} << switch (s2) {
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
_ => 0
};
int test2(String s1, String s2) =>
switch (s1) {
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
_ => 0
} >> switch (s2) {
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
_ => 0
};
int test3(String s1, String s2) =>
switch (s1) {
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
_ => 0
} >>> switch (s2) {
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
_ => 0
};
main() {
Expect.equals(4, test1("two", "one"));
Expect.equals(1, test2("two", "one"));
Expect.equals(1, test3("two", "one"));
}