Is using if (0) to skip a case in a switch supposed to work?

I have a situation where I would like for two cases in a C++ switch statement to both fall through to a third case. Specifically, the second case would fall through to the third case, and the first case would also fall through to the third case without passing through the second case.

I had a dumb idea, tried it, and it worked! I wrapped the second case in an if (0) { ... }. It looks like this:

#ifdef __cplusplus
#  include <cstdio>
#else
#  include <stdio.h>
#endif

int main(void) {
    for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
        printf("%d: ", i);
        switch (i) {
        case 0:
            putchar('a');
            // @fallthrough@
            if (0) {        // fall past all of case 1 (!)
        case 1:
            putchar('b');
            // @fallthrough@
            }
        case 2:
            putchar('c');
            break;
        }
        putchar('\n');
    }
    return 0;
}

When I run it, I get the desired output:

0: ac
1: bc
2: c

I tried it in both C and C++ (both with clang), and it did the same thing.

My questions are: Is this valid C/C++? Is it supposed to do what it does?


Solution 1:

Yes, this is supposed to work. The case labels for a switch statement in C are almost exactly like goto labels (with some caveats about how they work with nested switch statements). In particular, they do not themselves define blocks for the statements you think of as being "inside the case", and you can use them to jump into the middle of a block just like you could with a goto. When jumping into the middle of a block, the same caveats as with goto apply regarding jumping over initialization of variables, etc.

With that said, in practice it's probably clearer to write this with a goto statement, as in:

    switch (i) {
    case 0:
        putchar('a');
        goto case2;
    case 1:
        putchar('b');
        // @fallthrough@
    case2:
    case 2:
        putchar('c');
        break;
    }

Solution 2:

Yes, this is allowed, and it does what you want. For a switch statement, the C++ standard says:

case and default labels in themselves do not alter the flow of control, which continues unimpeded across such labels. To exit from a switch, see break.

[Note 1: Usually, the substatement that is the subject of a switch is compound and case and default labels appear on the top-level statements contained within the (compound) substatement, but this is not required. Declarations can appear in the substatement of a switch statement. — end note]

So when the if statement is evaluated, control flow proceeds according to the rules of an if statement, regardless of intervening case labels.