Compartilhar via


Iteration Statements (C++)

 

The latest version of this topic can be found at Iteration Statements (C++).

Iteration statements cause statements (or compound statements) to be executed zero or more times, subject to some loop-termination criteria. When these statements are compound statements, they are executed in order, except when either the break statement or the continue statement is encountered.

C++ provides four iteration statements — while, do, for, and range-based for. Each of these iterates until its termination expression evaluates to zero (false), or until loop termination is forced with a break statement. The following table summarizes these statements and their actions; each is discussed in detail in the sections that follow.

Iteration Statements

Statement Evaluated At Initialization Increment
while Top of loop No No
do Bottom of loop No No
for Top of loop Yes Yes
range-based for Top of loop Yes Yes

The statement part of an iteration statement cannot be a declaration. However, it can be a compound statement containing a declaration.

See Also

Overview of C++ Statements