CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2009/wiki2 4 va
Introduction
The IF statement, a conditional language structure, has been available to programmers for quite some time. It was first introduced in FORTRAN in a form of an arithmetic IF statement back in 1957. The control of the program would be redirected to one of the three labels, depending on the value of the analyzed arithmetic expression (which could be negative, positive, or zero). Over the years, this language element had become obsolete and was replaced by a logical IF statement (if-then-else), the one that is still widely used to this day.
The logical IF statement is very familiar to most programmers as it is one of the first language structures they learn. Despite that, it is a cause of many code errors. Being an artifact that is left from the days of structured programming, most today's object-oriented languages have more sophisticated control structures. One of them is polymorphism.
Use of IF statements
class Vehicle def initialize puts "I am a vehicle" end end class Car < Vehicle def initialize super puts "I am a passenger car" end end class Truck < Vehicle def initialize super puts "I am a commercial truck" end end class Driver puts "Do you have a Car or a Truck?" #Expects Car or Truck, case sensitive type = gets my_car = eval(type).new if my_car.class == Car puts "I like 87 octane gasoline" elsif my_car.class == Truck puts "I like diesel" end end
Use of polymorphism
class Vehicle def initialize puts "I am a vehicle" end end class Car < Vehicle def initialize super puts "I am a passenger car" end def get_type_of_fuel "I like 87 octane gasoline" end end class Truck < Vehicle def initialize super puts "I am a truck" end def get_type_of_fuel "I like diesel" end end class Driver puts "Do you have a Car or a Truck?" #Expects Car or Truck, case sensitive type = gets my_car = eval(type).new puts my_car.get_type_of_fuel end
Conclusion
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