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Expression.Continue Method

Definition

Creates a GotoExpression representing a continue statement.

Overloads

Continue(LabelTarget)

Creates a GotoExpression representing a continue statement.

Continue(LabelTarget, Type)

Creates a GotoExpression representing a continue statement with the specified type.

Continue(LabelTarget)

Source:
GotoExpression.cs
Source:
GotoExpression.cs
Source:
GotoExpression.cs

Creates a GotoExpression representing a continue statement.

public:
 static System::Linq::Expressions::GotoExpression ^ Continue(System::Linq::Expressions::LabelTarget ^ target);
public static System.Linq.Expressions.GotoExpression Continue (System.Linq.Expressions.LabelTarget target);
static member Continue : System.Linq.Expressions.LabelTarget -> System.Linq.Expressions.GotoExpression
Public Shared Function Continue (target As LabelTarget) As GotoExpression

Parameters

target
LabelTarget

The LabelTarget that the GotoExpression will jump to.

Returns

A GotoExpression with Kind equal to Continue, the Target property set to target, and a null value to be passed to the target label upon jumping.

Examples

The following example demonstrates how to create a loop expression that uses the Continue method.

// Add the following directive to your file:
// using System.Linq.Expressions;

// A label that is used by a break statement and a loop.
LabelTarget breakLabel = Expression.Label();

// A label that is used by the Continue statement and the loop it refers to.
LabelTarget continueLabel = Expression.Label();

// This expression represents a Continue statement.
Expression continueExpr = Expression.Continue(continueLabel);

// A variable that triggers the exit from the loop.
ParameterExpression count = Expression.Parameter(typeof(int));

// A loop statement.
Expression loopExpr = Expression.Loop(
    Expression.Block(
        Expression.IfThen(
            Expression.GreaterThan(count, Expression.Constant(3)),
            Expression.Break(breakLabel)
        ),
        Expression.PreIncrementAssign(count),
        Expression.Call(
                    null,
                    typeof(Console).GetMethod("WriteLine", new Type[] { typeof(String) }),
                    Expression.Constant("Loop")
                ),
        continueExpr,
        Expression.PreDecrementAssign(count)
    ),
    breakLabel,
    continueLabel
);

// The following statement first creates an expression tree,
// then compiles it, and then runs it.
// Without the Continue statement, the loop would go on forever.
Expression.Lambda<Action<int>>(loopExpr, count).Compile()(1);

// This code example produces the following output:
//
// Loop
// Loop
// Loop
' Add the following directive to your file:
' Imports System.Linq.Expressions  

' A label that is used by a break statement and a loop. 
Dim breakLabel As LabelTarget = Expression.Label()

' A label that is used by the Continue statement and the loop it refers to.
Dim continueLabel As LabelTarget = Expression.Label()

' This expression represents a Continue statement.
Dim continueExpr As Expression = Expression.Continue(continueLabel)

' A variable that triggers the exit from the loop.
Dim count As ParameterExpression = Expression.Parameter(GetType(Integer))

' A loop statement.
Dim loopExpr As Expression = Expression.Loop(
       Expression.Block(
           Expression.IfThen(
               Expression.GreaterThan(count, Expression.Constant(3)),
               Expression.Break(breakLabel)
           ),
           Expression.PreIncrementAssign(count),
           Expression.Call(
                       Nothing,
                       GetType(Console).GetMethod("WriteLine", New Type() {GetType(String)}),
                       Expression.Constant("Loop")
                   ),
           continueExpr,
           Expression.PreDecrementAssign(count)
       ),
       breakLabel,
       continueLabel
   )

' The following statement first creates an expression tree,
' then compiles it, and then runs it.
' Without the Continue statement, the loop would go on forever.
Expression.Lambda(Of Action(Of Integer))(loopExpr, count).Compile()(1)

' This code example produces the following output:
'
' Loop
' Loop
' Loop

Applies to

Continue(LabelTarget, Type)

Source:
GotoExpression.cs
Source:
GotoExpression.cs
Source:
GotoExpression.cs

Creates a GotoExpression representing a continue statement with the specified type.

public:
 static System::Linq::Expressions::GotoExpression ^ Continue(System::Linq::Expressions::LabelTarget ^ target, Type ^ type);
public static System.Linq.Expressions.GotoExpression Continue (System.Linq.Expressions.LabelTarget target, Type type);
static member Continue : System.Linq.Expressions.LabelTarget * Type -> System.Linq.Expressions.GotoExpression
Public Shared Function Continue (target As LabelTarget, type As Type) As GotoExpression

Parameters

target
LabelTarget

The LabelTarget that the GotoExpression will jump to.

type
Type

An Type to set the Type property equal to.

Returns

A GotoExpression with Kind equal to Continue, the Target property set to target, the Type property set to type, and a null value to be passed to the target label upon jumping.

Applies to