Control Structure That Continues to Be Performed While a Test Condition is True

Do While loop flow diagram

In most computer programming languages, a do while loop is a control flow statement that executes a block of code at least once, and then either repeatedly executes the block, or stops executing it, depending on a given boolean condition at the end of the block.

The do while construct consists of a process symbol and a condition. First, the code within the block is executed, and then the condition is evaluated. If the condition is true the code within the block is executed again. This repeats until the condition becomes false. Because do while loops check the condition after the block is executed, the control structure is often also known as a post-test loop. Contrast with the while loop, which tests the condition before the code within the block is executed, the do-while loop is an exit-condition loop. This means that the code must always be executed first and then the expression or test condition is evaluated. If it is true, the code executes the body of the loop again. This process is repeated as long as the expression evaluates to true. If the expression is false, the loop terminates and control transfers to the statement following the do-while loop. In other words, whereas a while loop sets the truth of a statement as a condition precedent for the code's execution, a do-while loop provides for the action's ongoing execution subject to defeasance by the condition's falsity, which falsity (i.e., the truth of the condition's negation) is set as a condition subsequent.

It is possible, and in some cases desirable, for the condition to always evaluate to true, creating an infinite loop. When such a loop is created intentionally, there is usually another control structure (such as a break statement) that allows termination of the loop.

Some languages may use a different naming convention for this type of loop. For example, the Pascal and Lua languages have a "repeat until" loop, which continues to run until the control expression is true (and then terminates) — whereas a "while" loop runs while the control expression is true (and terminates once the expression becomes false).

Equivalent constructs [edit]

                        do                                    {                                                do_work            ();                                    }                                    while                                    (            condition            );                      

is equivalent to

                        do_work            ();                        while                                    (            condition            )                                    {                                                do_work            ();                        }                      

In this manner, the do ... while loop saves the initial "loop priming" with do_work(); on the line before the while loop.

As long as the continue statement is not used, the above is technically equivalent to the following (though these examples are not typical or modern style used in everyday computers):

                        while                                    (            true            )                                    {                                                do_work            ();                                                if                                    (            !            condition            )                                    break            ;                        }                      

or

                        LOOPSTART            :                                                do_work            ();                                                if                                    (            condition            )                                    goto                                    LOOPSTART            ;                      

Demonstrating do while loops [edit]

These example programs calculate the factorial of 5 using their respective languages' syntax for a do-while loop.

ActionScript 3 [edit]

                        var            counter            :            int            =            5            ;            var            factorial            :            int            =            1            ;            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            --;            /* Multiply, then decrement. */            }            while            (            counter            >            0            );            trace            (            factorial            );          

Ada [edit]

                        with            Ada.Integer_Text_IO            ;            procedure            Factorial            is            Counter            :            Integer            :=            5            ;            Factorial            :            Integer            :=            1            ;            begin            loop            Factorial            :=            Factorial            *            Counter            ;            Counter            :=            Counter            -            1            ;            exit            when            Counter            =            0            ;            end            loop            ;            Ada            .            Integer_Text_IO            .            Put            (            Factorial            );            end            Factorial            ;          

BASIC [edit]

Early BASICs (such as GW-BASIC) used the syntax WHILE/WEND. Modern BASICs such as PowerBASIC provide both WHILE/WEND and DO/LOOP structures, with syntax such as DO WHILE/LOOP, DO UNTIL/LOOP, DO/LOOP WHILE, DO/LOOP UNTIL, and DO/LOOP (without outer testing, but with a conditional EXIT LOOP somewhere inside the loop). Typical BASIC source code:

                        Dim            factorial            As            Integer            Dim            counter            As            Integer            factorial            =            1            counter            =            5            Do            factorial            =            factorial            *            counter            counter            =            counter            -            1            Loop            While            counter            >            0            Print            factorial          

C# [edit]

                        int            counter            =            5            ;            int            factorial            =            1            ;            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            --;            /* Multiply, then decrement. */            }            while            (            counter            >            0            );            System            .            Console            .            WriteLine            (            factorial            );          

C [edit]

                        int                                    counter                                    =                                    5            ;                        int                                    factorial                                    =                                    1            ;                        do                                    {                                                factorial                                    *=                                    counter            --            ;                                    /* Multiply, then decrement. */                        }                                    while                                    (            counter                                    >                                    0            );                        printf            (            "factorial of 5 is %d            \n            "            ,                                    factorial            );                      

Do-while(0) statements are also commonly used in C macros as a way to wrap multiple statements into a regular (as opposed to compound) statement. It makes a semicolon needed after the macro, providing a more function-like appearance for simple parsers and programmers as well as avoiding the scoping problem with if. It is recommended in CERT C Coding Standard rule PRE10-C.[1]

C++ [edit]

                        int                                    counter                                    =                                    5            ;                        int                                    factorial                                    =                                    1            ;                        do                                    {                                                factorial                                    *=                                    counter            --            ;                        }                                    while                                    (            counter                                    >                                    0            );                        std            ::            cout                                    <<                                    "factorial of 5 is "            <<                                    factorial                                    <<                                    std            ::            endl            ;                      

CFScript [edit]

                        factorial            =            1            ;            count            =            10            ;            do            {            factorial            *=            count            --            ;            }            while            (            count            >            1            );            writeOutput            (            factorial            );          

D [edit]

                        int            counter            =            5            ;            int            factorial            =            1            ;            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            --;            // Multiply, then decrement.            }            while            (            counter            >            0            );            writeln            (            "factorial of 5 is "            ,            factorial            );          

Fortran [edit]

With legacy FORTRAN 77 there is no DO-WHILE construct but the same effect can be achieved with GOTO:

                        INTEGER                        CNT            ,            FACT            CNT            =            5            FACT            =            1            1            CONTINUE                                    FACT            =            FACT            *            CNT            CNT            =            CNT            -            1            IF            (            CNT            .            GT            .            0            )            GOTO                        1            PRINT            *            ,            FACT            END          

Fortran 90 and later does not have a do-while construct either, but it does have a while loop construct which uses the keywords "do while" and is thus actually the same as the for loop.[2]

                        program                        FactorialProg            integer            ::            counter            =            5            integer            ::            factorial            =            1            factorial            =            factorial            *            counter            counter            =            counter            -            1            do while            (            counter            >            0            )            ! Truth value is tested before the loop            factorial            =            factorial            *            counter            counter            =            counter            -            1            end do                                                  print            *            ,            factorial            end program                        FactorialProg          

Java [edit]

                        int            counter            =            5            ;            int            factorial            =            1            ;            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            --            ;            /* Multiply, then decrement. */            }            while            (            counter            >            0            );            System            .            out            .            println            (            "The factorial of 5 is "            +            factorial            );            //============================================//            // The below function does the same as above. //            //============================================//            int            counter            =            5            ;            int            factorial            =            1            ;            while            (            counter            >            0            ){            factorial            *=            counter            --            ;            /* Multiply, then decrement. */            }            System            .            out            .            println            (            "The factorial of 5 is "            +            factorial            );          

JavaScript [edit]

                        let            counter            =            5            ;            // Declaring two variables, counter and factorial                        let            factorial            =            1            ;            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            --            ;            //What will be looped            }            while            (            counter            >            0            );            //The looping conditions            console            .            log            (            factorial            );            //Showing the result          

[3]

Kotlin [edit]

                        var            counter            =            5            var            factorial            =            1            //These line of code is almost the same as the above JavaScript codes, the only difference is the keyword that shows the results            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            --            }            while            (            counter            >            0            )            println            (            "Factorial of 5 is                        $            factorial            "            )          

[4]

Pascal [edit]

Pascal does not have a do/while; instead, it has a repeat/until. As mentioned in the introduction, one can consider a repeat/until to be equivalent to a 'do code while not expression' construct.

                        factorial            :=            1            ;            counter            :=            5            ;            repeat            factorial            :=            factorial            *            counter            ;            counter            :=            counter            -            1            ;            // In Object Pascal one may use dec (counter);            until            counter            =            0            ;          

PHP [edit]

                        $counter            =            5            ;            $factorial            =            1            ;            do            {            $factorial            *=            $counter            --            ;            }            while            (            $counter            >            0            );            echo            $factorial            ;          

PL/I [edit]

The PL/I DO statement subsumes the functions of the post-test loop (do until), the pre-test loop (do while), and the for loop. All functions can be included in a single statement. The example shows only the "do until" syntax.

declare counter   fixed initial(5); declare factorial fixed initial(1);  do until(counter <= 0);     factorial = factorial * counter;     counter = counter - 1; end;  put(factorial);        

Python [edit]

Python lacks a specific do while flow control construct. However, the equivalent may be constructed out of a while loop with a break.

                        counter            =            5            factorial            =            1            while            True            :            factorial            *=            counter            counter            -=            1            if            counter            ==            0            :            break            print            (            factorial            )          

Racket [edit]

In Racket, as in other Scheme implementations, a "named-let" is a popular way to implement loops:

                        #lang                        racket            (            define            counter            5            )            (            define            factorial            1            )            (            let            loop            ()            (            set!            factorial            (            *            factorial            counter            ))            (            set!            counter            (            sub1            counter            ))            (            when            (            >            counter            0            )            (            loop            )))            (            displayln            factorial            )          

Compare this with the first example of the while loop example for Racket. Be aware that a named let can also take arguments.

Racket and Scheme also provide a proper do loop.

                        (            define                        (            factorial            n            )            (            do                        ((            counter            n            (            -                        counter            1            ))            (            result            1            (            *                        result            counter            )))            ((            =                        counter            0            )            result            )            ; Stop condition and return value.            ; The body of the do-loop is empty.            ))          

Ruby [edit]

                        counter            =            10            factorial            =            2            begin            factorial            *=            counter            counter            -=            2            end            while            counter            >            1            puts            factorial          

Smalltalk [edit]

                        |                          counter factorial                        |            counter            :=            5            .            factorial            :=            1            .            [counter            >            0]            whileTrue:            [factorial            :=            factorial            *            counter            .            counter            :=            counter            -            1].            Transcript            show:            factorial            printString          

Swift [edit]

Swift 2.x and later:[5]

                        var            counter            =            5            var            factorial            =            1            repeat            {            factorial            *=            counter            counter            -=            1            }            while            counter            >            0            print            (            factorial            )          

Swift 1.x:

                        var            counter            =            5            var            factorial            =            1            do            {            factorial            *=            counter            counter            -=            1            }            while            counter            >            0            println            (            factorial            )          

Visual Basic .NET [edit]

                        Dim            counter            As            Integer            =            5            Dim            factorial            As            Integer            =            1            Do            factorial            *=            counter            counter            -=            1            Loop            While            counter            >            0            Console            .            WriteLine            (            factorial            )          

See also [edit]

  • Control flow
  • For loop
  • Foreach
  • Repeat loop (disambiguation)
  • While loop

References [edit]

  1. ^ "C multi-line macro: do/while(0) vs scope block". Stack Overflow.
  2. ^ "Microsoft visual basic". msdn.microsoft.com . Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  3. ^ "do...while". MDN Web Docs.
  4. ^ "Control Flow: if, when, for, while - Kotlin Programming Language". Kotlin.
  5. ^ "Control Flow — The Swift Programming Language (Swift 5.3)". docs.swift.org.

External links [edit]

  • do {...} while (0) in C macros

jamisonwouturairim.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do_while_loop

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