Java allows to freely mix case labels and ordinary statement labels in the body of
a switch statement. However, this is confusing to read and may be the result of a typo.
Examine the non-case labels to see whether they were meant to be case labels. If not, consider placing the non-case label headed code into a function, and use a function call inline in the switch body instead.
public class Test {
void test_noncase_label_in_switch(int p) {
switch (p) {
case 1: // Compliant
case2: // Non-compliant, likely a typo
break;
case 3:
notcaselabel: // Non-compliant, confusing to read
for (;;) {
break notcaselabel;
}
}
}
}In the example, case2 is most likely a typo and should be fixed. For the intentional notcaselabel, placing the labelled code into a function and then calling that function is more readable.
CodeQL query help for JavaScript and TypeScript - Non-case label in switch statement.