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Chapter 3

Control Flow, Methods, Parameters, and Scope

Control execution using conditionals and loops, and build reusable logic through methods, parameters, and proper scoping.

Inside this chapter

  1. Conditionals and Loops
  2. Methods
  3. Parameter Types
  4. Switch and Pattern Matching Basics
  5. Scope and Lifetime
  6. Real-World Usage Snapshot

Series navigation

Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from C# syntax and OOP to modern .NET web development, data access, async programming, architecture, and advanced engineering practice. Use the navigation at the bottom to move smoothly through the full series.

Tutorial Home

Chapter 3

Conditionals and Loops

if (score >= 90)
{
    Console.WriteLine("Excellent");
}
else if (score >= 75)
{
    Console.WriteLine("Good");
}
else
{
    Console.WriteLine("Needs improvement");
}

for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++)
{
    Console.WriteLine(i);
}

C# offers familiar control-flow constructs, but readability and intent remain more important than syntax alone.

Chapter 3

Methods

static int Add(int a, int b)
{
    return a + b;
}

Methods should have focused responsibilities and meaningful names. Clear method boundaries make code easier to test and reuse.

Chapter 3

Parameter Types

C# supports value parameters, optional parameters, named arguments, ref, out, and params. Beginners should start with value parameters and then learn the advanced forms with care.

static void PrintUser(string name, int age = 18)
{
    Console.WriteLine($"{name} is {age}");
}
Chapter 3

Switch and Pattern Matching Basics

string message = score switch
{
    >= 90 => "Excellent",
    >= 75 => "Good",
    _ => "Keep working"
};

Modern C# uses expressive switch expressions and pattern matching, which make many decision structures cleaner than long chains of if-else logic.

Chapter 3

Scope and Lifetime

Variables exist only within their scope. Understanding block scope and method scope helps students avoid confusion about reuse, side effects, and accidental shadowing.

Chapter 3

Real-World Usage Snapshot

Control flow and method design shape every application, from web APIs and services to desktop tools and automation scripts. Good method design is one of the earliest markers of clean code.

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