The continue Statement
Forces transfer of control to the controlling expression of the smallest enclosing do, for, or while loop.
continue;
Remarks
Any remaining statements in the current iteration are not executed. The next iteration of the loop is determined as follows:
In a do or while loop, the next iteration starts by reevaluating the controlling expression of the do or while statement.
In a for loop (using the syntax for(init-expr; cond-expr; loop-expr)), continue causes loop-expr to be executed. Then cond-expr is reevaluated and, depending on the result, the loop either terminates or another iteration occurs.
The following example shows how the continue statement can be used to bypass sections of code and begin the next iteration of a loop.
Example
// continue_statement.cpp
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int i = 0;
do
{
i++;
printf_s("before the continue\n");
continue;
printf("after the continue, should never print\n");
} while (i < 3);
printf_s("after the do loop\n");
}
Output
before the continue before the continue before the continue after the do loop