| description | Learn more about: Iteration Statements (C++) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| title | Iteration Statements (C++) | ||
| ms.date | 11/04/2016 | ||
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| ms.assetid | bf6d75f7-ead2-426a-9c47-33847f59b8c7 |
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.
| 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.