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The do-while Statement (C+)

Executes a statement repeatedly until the specified termination condition (the expression) evaluates to zero.

do 
   statement
   while ( expression ) ;

Remarks

The test of the termination condition is made after each execution of the loop; therefore, a do-while loop executes one or more times, depending on the value of the termination expression. The do-while statement can also terminate when a break, goto, or return statement is executed within the statement body.

The expression must have arithmetic or pointer type. Execution proceeds as follows:

  1. The statement body is executed.

  2. 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.

Example

The following sample demonstrates the do-while statement:

// do_while_statement.cpp
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
    int i = 0;
    do
    {
        printf_s("\n%d",i+);
    } while (i < 3);
}

See Also

Reference

Iteration Statements (C+)

C++ Keywords

The while Statement