The Match Control Flow Construct

Cairo has an extremely powerful control flow construct called match that allows you to compare a value against a series of patterns and then execute code based on which pattern matches. Patterns can be made up of literal values, variable names, wildcards, and many other things. The power of match comes from the expressiveness of the patterns and the fact that the compiler confirms that all possible cases are handled.

Think of a match expression as being like a coin-sorting machine: coins slide down a track with variously sized holes along it, and each coin falls through the first hole it encounters that it fits into. In the same way, values go through each pattern in a match, and at the first pattern the value “fits”, the value falls into the associated code block to be used during execution.

Speaking of coins, let’s use them as an example using match! We can write a function that takes an unknown US coin and, in a similar way as the counting machine, determines which coin it is and returns its value in cents, as shown in Listing 5-3.

enum Coin {
    Penny: (),
    Nickel: (),
    Dime: (),
    Quarter: (),
}

fn value_in_cents(coin: Coin) -> felt252 {
    match coin {
        Coin::Penny(_) => 1,
        Coin::Nickel(_) => 5,
        Coin::Dime(_) => 10,
        Coin::Quarter(_) => 25,
    }
}

Listing 5-3: An enum and a match expression that has the variants of the enum as its patterns

Let’s break down the match in the value_in_cents function. First we list the match keyword followed by an expression, which in this case is the value coin. This seems very similar to a conditional expression used with if, but there’s a big difference: with if, the condition needs to evaluate to a Boolean value, but here it can be any type. The type of coin in this example is the Coin enum that we defined on the first line.

Next are the match arms. An arm has two parts: a pattern and some code. The first arm here has a pattern that is the value Coin::Penny(_) and then the => operator that separates the pattern and the code to run. The code in this case is just the value 1. Each arm is separated from the next with a comma.

When the match expression executes, it compares the resultant value against the pattern of each arm, in order. If a pattern matches the value, the code associated with that pattern is executed. If that pattern doesn’t match the value, execution continues to the next arm, much as in a coin-sorting machine. We can have as many arms as we need: in the above example, our match has four arms.

In Cairo, the order of the arms must follow the same order as the enum.

The code associated with each arm is an expression, and the resultant value of the expression in the matching arm is the value that gets returned for the entire match expression.

We don’t typically use curly brackets if the match arm code is short, as it is in our example where each arm just returns a value. If you want to run multiple lines of code in a match arm, you must use curly brackets, with a comma following the arm. For example, the following code prints “Lucky penny!” every time the method is called with a Coin::Penny(()), but still returns the last value of the block, 1:

fn value_in_cents(coin: Coin) -> felt252 {
    match coin {
        Coin::Penny(_) => {
            ('Lucky penny!').print();
            1
        },
        Coin::Nickel(_) => 5,
        Coin::Dime(_) => 10,
        Coin::Quarter(_)=> 25,
    }
}

Patterns That Bind to Values

Another useful feature of match arms is that they can bind to the parts of the values that match the pattern. This is how we can extract values out of enum variants.

As an example, let’s change one of our enum variants to hold data inside it. From 1999 through 2008, the United States minted quarters with different designs for each of the 50 states on one side. No other coins got state designs, so only quarters have this extra value. We can add this information to our enum by changing the Quarter variant to include a UsState value stored inside it, which we’ve done in Listing 5-4.

#[derive(Drop)]
enum UsState {
    Alabama: (),
    Alaska: (),
}

#[derive(Drop)]
enum Coin {
    Penny: (),
    Nickel: (),
    Dime: (),
    Quarter: (UsState),
}

Listing 5-4: A Coin enum in which the Quarter variant also holds a UsState value

Let’s imagine that a friend is trying to collect all 50 state quarters. While we sort our loose change by coin type, we’ll also call out the name of the state associated with each quarter so that if it’s one our friend doesn’t have, they can add it to their collection.

In the match expression for this code, we add a variable called state to the pattern that matches values of the variant Coin::Quarter. When a Coin::Quarter matches, the state variable will bind to the value of that quarter’s state. Then we can use state in the code for that arm, like so:

fn value_in_cents(coin: Coin) -> felt252 {
    match coin {
        Coin::Penny(_) => 1,
        Coin::Nickel(_) => 5,
        Coin::Dime(_) => 10,
        Coin::Quarter(state)=> {
            state.print();
            25
        },
    }
}

To print the value of a variant of an enum in Cairo, we need to add an implementation for the print function for the debug::PrintTrait:

impl UsStatePrintImpl of PrintTrait::<UsState> {
    fn print(self: UsState) {
        match self {
            UsState::Alabama(_) => ('Alabama').print(),
            UsState::Alaska(_) => ('Alaska').print(),
        }
    }
}

If we were to call value_in_cents(Coin::Quarter(UsState::Alaska(()))), coin would be Coin::Quarter(UsState::Alaska()). When we compare that value with each of the match arms, none of them match until we reach Coin::Quarter(state). At that point, the binding for state will be the value UsState::Alaska(). We can then use that binding in the PrintTrait, thus getting the inner state value out of the Coin enum variant for Quarter.

Matching with Options

In the previous section, we wanted to get the inner T value out of the Some case when using Option<T>; we can also handle Option<T> using match, as we did with the Coin enum! Instead of comparing coins, we’ll compare the variants of Option<T>, but the way the match expression works remains the same. You can use Options by importing the option::OptionTrait trait.

Let’s say we want to write a function that takes an Option<u8> and, if there’s a value inside, adds 1_u8 to that value. If there isn’t a value inside, the function should return the None value and not attempt to perform any operations.

This function is very easy to write, thanks to match, and will look like Listing 5-5.

use option::OptionTrait;
use debug::PrintTrait;

fn plus_one(x: Option<u8>) -> Option<u8> {
    match x {
        Option::Some(val) => Option::Some(val + 1_u8),
        Option::None(_) => Option::None(()),
    }
}

fn main() {
    let five: Option<u8> = Option::Some(5_u8);
    let six: Option<u8> = plus_one(five);
    six.unwrap().print();
    let none = plus_one(Option::None(()));
    none.unwrap().print();
}

Listing 5-5: A function that uses a match expression on an Option<u8>

Note that your arms must respect the same order as the enum defined in the OptionTrait of the core Cairo lib.

    enum Option<T> {
        Some: T,
        None: (),
    }

Let’s examine the first execution of plus_one in more detail. When we call plus_one(five), the variable x in the body of plus_one will have the value Some(5_u8). We then compare that against each match arm:

    Option::Some(val) => Option::Some(val + 1_u8),

Does Option::Some(5_u8) value match the pattern Option::Some(val)? It does! We have the same variant. The val binds to the value contained in Option::Some, so val takes the value 5_u8. The code in the match arm is then executed, so we add 1_u8 to the value of val and create a new Option::Some value with our total 6_u8 inside. Because the first arm matched, no other arms are compared.

Now let’s consider the second call of plus_one in our main function, where x is Option::None(()). We enter the match and compare to the first arm:

    Option::Some(val) => Option::Some(val + 1_u8),

The Option::Some(val) value doesn’t match the pattern Option::None, so we continue to the next arm:

    Option::None(_) => Option::None(()),

It matches! There’s no value to add to, so the program stops and returns the Option::None(()) value on the right side of =>.

Combining match and enums is useful in many situations. You’ll see this pattern a lot in Cairo code: match against an enum, bind a variable to the data inside, and then execute code based on it. It’s a bit tricky at first, but once you get used to it, you’ll wish you had it in all languages. It’s consistently a user favorite.

Matches Are Exhaustive

There’s one other aspect of match we need to discuss: the arms’ patterns must cover all possibilities. Consider this version of our plus_one function, which has a bug and won’t compile:

$ cairo-run src/test.cairo
    error: Unsupported match. Currently, matches require one arm per variant,
    in the order of variant definition.
    --> test.cairo:34:5
        match x {
        ^*******^
    Error: failed to compile: ./src/test.cairo

Cairo knows that we didn’t cover every possible case, and even knows which pattern we forgot! Matches in Cairo are exhaustive: we must exhaust every last possibility in order for the code to be valid. Especially in the case of Option<T>, when Cairo prevents us from forgetting to explicitly handle the None case, it protects us from assuming that we have a value when we might have null, thus making the billion-dollar mistake discussed earlier impossible.

Match 0 and the _ Placeholder

Using enums, we can also take special actions for a few particular values, but for all other values take one default action. Currently only 0 and the _operator are supported.

Imagine we’re implementing a game where, you get a random number between 0 and 7. If you have 0, you win. For all other values you loose. Here's a match that implements that logic, with the number hardcoded rather than a random value.

fn did_i_win(nb: felt252) {
    match nb {
        0 => ('You won!').print(),
        _ => ('You lost...').print(),
    }
}

The first arm, the pattern is the literal values 0. For the last arm that covers every other possible value, the pattern is the character _. This code compiles, even though we haven’t listed all the possible values a felt252 can have, because the last pattern will match all values not specifically listed. This catch-all pattern meets the requirement that match must be exhaustive. Note that we have to put the catch-all arm last because the patterns are evaluated in order. If we put the catch-all arm earlier, the other arms would never run, so Cairo will warn us if we add arms after a catch-all!