do-while Statement (C)
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The do-while
statement lets you repeat a statement or compound statement until a specified expression becomes false.
Syntax
iteration-statement:
do statement while ( expression ) ;
The expression in a do-while
statement is evaluated after the body of the loop is executed. Therefore, the body of the loop is always executed at least once.
The expression must have arithmetic or pointer type. Execution proceeds as follows:
The statement body is executed.
Next, expression is evaluated. If expression is false, the
do-while
statement terminates and control passes to the next statement in the program. If expression is true (nonzero), the process is repeated, beginning with step 1.
The do-while
statement can also terminate when a break, goto
, or return
statement is executed within the statement body.
This is an example of the do-while
statement:
do
{
y = f( x );
x--;
} while ( x > 0 );
In this do-while
statement, the two statements y = f( x );
and x--;
are executed, regardless of the initial value of x
. Then x > 0
is evaluated. If x
is greater than 0, the statement body is executed again and x > 0
is reevaluated. The statement body is executed repeatedly as long as x
remains greater than 0. Execution of the do-while
statement terminates when x
becomes 0 or negative. The body of the loop is executed at least once.