Synopsis
<#if condition> ...<#elseif condition2> ...<#elseif condition3> ......<#else> ...</#if>
Where:
-
condition
,condition2
, ...etc.: Expression evaluates to a boolean value.
The elseif
-s and the else
are optional.
Camel case name variant: elseIf
Description
You can use if
, elseif
and else
directives to conditionally skip a section of the template. The condition
-s must evaluate to a boolean value, or else an error will abort template processing. The elseif
-s and else
-s must occur inside if
(that is, between the if
start-tag and end-tag). The if
can contain any number of elseif
-s (including 0) and at the end optionally one else
. Examples:
if
with 0 elseif
and no else
:
<#if x == 1> x is 1</#if>
if
with 0 elseif
and else
:
<#if x == 1> x is 1<#else> x is not 1</#if>
if
with 2 elseif
and no else
:
<#if x == 1> x is 1<#elseif x == 2> x is 2<#elseif x == 3> x is 3</#if>
if
with 3 elseif
and else
:
<#if x == 1> x is 1<#elseif x == 2> x is 2<#elseif x == 3> x is 3<#elseif x == 4> x is 4<#else> x is not 1 nor 2 nor 3 nor 4</#if>
To see more about boolean expressions, see: Template Author's Guide/The Template/Expressions.
You can nest if
directives (of course):
<#if x == 1> x is 1 <#if y == 1> and y is 1 too <#else> but y is not </#if><#else> x is not 1 <#if y < 0> and y is less than 0 </#if></#if>
When you want to test if x > 0
or x >= 0
, writing <#if x > 0>
and <#if x >= 0>
is WRONG, as the first >
will close the #if
tag. To work that around, write <#if x gt 0>
or <#if gte 0>
. Also note that if the comparison occurs inside parentheses, you will have no such problem, like <#if foo.bar(x > 0)>
works as expected.