break statement is omitted from a switch statement's case, the following case statement(s) are executed until a break is encountered. If you have multiple inputs with the same output, you can represent them in a switch statement like this:
```js
switch(val) {
case 1:
case 2:
case 3:
result = "1, 2, or 3";
break;
case 4:
result = "4 alone";
}
```
Cases for 1, 2, and 3 will all produce the same result.
answer for the following ranges:1-3 - "Low"4-6 - "Mid"7-9 - "High"
Notecase statement for each number in the range.
sequentialSizes(1) should return "Low"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(1) === "Low");
- text: sequentialSizes(2) should return "Low"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(2) === "Low");
- text: sequentialSizes(3) should return "Low"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(3) === "Low");
- text: sequentialSizes(4) should return "Mid"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(4) === "Mid");
- text: sequentialSizes(5) should return "Mid"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(5) === "Mid");
- text: sequentialSizes(6) should return "Mid"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(6) === "Mid");
- text: sequentialSizes(7) should return "High"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(7) === "High");
- text: sequentialSizes(8) should return "High"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(8) === "High");
- text: sequentialSizes(9) should return "High"
testString: assert(sequentialSizes(9) === "High");
- text: You should not use any if or else statements
testString: assert(!/else/g.test(code) || !/if/g.test(code));
- text: You should have nine case statements
testString: assert(code.match(/case/g).length === 9);
```