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Mastering Chef
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Conditional statements and loops allow developers to branch off from the serial flow of execution of code and also iterate through the code. Ruby provides multiple ways to do this job. Let's look at a few of them.
The
if statement is pretty much a basic branching statement that's provided by many programming languages. It's pretty much how we use the "if" statement in natural language—if it's true, do this; if it's not, do something else.
x=2 if x == 2 puts "True" else puts "False" end
If we need to check for multiple conditions, we get an elsif statement, that we can embed between the if and else statements:
height = 164 if height > 170 puts "Tall" elsif height > 160 puts "Normal" else puts "Dwarf" end
The fun part of doing this in Ruby is that you can assign values returned by the if, elsif, and else blocks. For example, you might want to save the Tall, Normal, or Dwarf message inside some variable for later use. You can do this...
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