The Islamia College of Science & Commerce, Srinagar - J &K: (UGC-Autonomous)
The Islamia College of Science & Commerce, Srinagar - J &K: (UGC-Autonomous)
The Islamia College of Science & Commerce, Srinagar - J &K: (UGC-Autonomous)
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Purpose Educational.
publication.
In looping, a program executes the sequence of statements many times until the stated
condition becomes false. A loop consists of two parts, a body of a loop and a control
statement. The control statement is a combination of some conditions that direct the
body of the loop to execute until the specified condition becomes false.
• Types of Loops
• While Loop
• Do-While loop
• For loop
• Break Statement
• Continue Statement
Types of Loops
Depending upon the position of a control statement in a program, a loop is classified into
two types:
In an entry controlled loop, a condition is checked before executing the body of a loop.
In an exit controlled loop, a condition is checked after executing the body of a loop. It is
Sample Loop
The control conditions must be well defined and specified otherwise the loop will
execute an infinite number of times. The loop that does not stop executing and processes
the statements number of times is called as an infinite loop. An infinite loop is also called
The specified condition determines whether to execute the loop body or not.
While Loop
A while loop is the most straightforward looping structure. The basic format of while
loop is as follows:
while (condition) {
statements;
body of the loop. If a condition is true then and only then the body of a loop is executed.
After the body of a loop is executed then control again goes back at the beginning, and
the condition is checked if it is true, the same process is executed until the condition
becomes false. Once the condition becomes false, the control goes out of the loop.
After exiting the loop, the control goes to the statements which are immediately after
the loop. The body of a loop can contain more than one statement. If it contains only one
statement, then the curly braces are not compulsory. It is a good practice though to use
In while loop, if the condition is not true, then the body of a loop will not be executed,
not even once. It is different in do while loop which we will see shortly.
#include<stdio.h>
#include<conio.h>
int main()
printf("%d\n",num);
return 0;
Output:
10
The above program illustrates the use of while loop. In the above program, we have
We have initialized a variable called num with value 1. We are going to print from 1 to
10 hence the variable is initialized with value 1. If you want to print from 0, then assign
In a while loop, we have provided a condition (num<=10), which means the loop will
execute the body until the value of num becomes 10. After that, the loop will be
In the body of a loop, we have a print function to print our number and an increment
operation to increment the value per execution of a loop. An initial value of num is 1,
after the execution, it will become 2, and during the next execution, it will become 3.
This process will continue until the value becomes 10 and then it will print the series on
\n is used for formatting purposes which means the value will be printed on a new line.
Do-While loop
A do-while loop is similar to the while loop except that the condition is always
do {
statements
} while (expression);
As we saw in a while loop, the body is executed if and only if the condition is true. In
some cases, we have to execute a body of the loop at least once even if the condition is
In the do-while loop, the body of a loop is always executed at least once. After the body
is executed, then it checks the condition. If the condition is true, then it will again
execute the body of a loop otherwise control is transferred out of the loop.
Similar to the while loop, once the control goes out of the loop the statements which
The critical difference between the while and do-while loop is that in while loop the
while is written at the beginning. In do-while loop, the while condition is written at
#include<stdio.h>
#include<conio.h>
int main()
do //do-while loop
printf("%d\n",2*num);
}while(num<=10);
return 0;
Output:
10
12
14
16
18
20
In the above example, we have printed multiplication table of 2 using a do-while loop.
Let's see how the program was able to print the series.
First, we have initialized a variable 'num' with value 1. Then we have written a do-
while loop.
In a loop, we have a print function that will print the series by multiplying the value of
num with 2.
After each increment, the value of num will increase by 1, and it will be printed on the
screen.
Initially, the value of num is 1. In a body of a loop, the print function will be executed
in this way: 2*num where num=1, then 2*1=2 hence the value two will be printed. This
will go on until the value of num becomes 10. After that loop will be terminated and a
statement which is immediately after the loop will be executed. In this case return 0.
For loop
A for loop is a more efficient loop structure in 'C' programming. The general structure
statements;
The condition is a Boolean expression that tests and compares the counter to a fixed
value after each iteration, stopping the for loop when false is returned.
value.
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
int number;
return 0;
Output:
10
The above program prints the number series from 1-10 using for loop.
In for loop, in the initialization part, we have assigned value 1 to the variable number.
In the condition part, we have specified our condition and then the increment part.
In the body of a loop, we have a print function to print the numbers on a new line in
the console. We have the value one stored in number, after the first iteration the value
will be incremented, and it will become 2. Now the variable number has the value 2.
The condition will be rechecked and since the condition is true loop will be executed,
and it will print two on the screen. This loop will keep on executing until the value of
the variable becomes 10. After that, the loop will be terminated, and a series of 1-10
In C, the for loop can have multiple expressions separated by commas in each part.
For example:
statements;
Also, we can skip the initial value expression, condition and/or increment by adding a
semicolon.
For example:
int i=0;
printf("%d\n", i);
Notice that loops can also be nested where there is an outer loop and an inner loop. For
each iteration of the outer loop, the inner loop repeats its entire cycle.
Consider the following example, that uses nested for loops output a multiplication
table:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
int i, j;
int table = 2;
int max = 5;
}}
Output:
1x0=0
1x1=1
1x2=2
1x3=3
1x4=4
1x5=5
2x0=0
2x1=2
2x2=4
2x3=6
2x4=8
2 x 5 = 10
The nesting of for loops can be done up-to any level. The nested loops should be
adequately indented to make code readable. In some versions of 'C,' the nesting is
The nested loops are mostly used in array applications which we will see in further
tutorials.
Break Statement
The break statement is used mainly in in the switch statement. It is also useful for
We consider the following program which introduces a break to exit a while loop:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
int num = 5;
if (num == 3)
break;
printf("%d\n", num);
num--;
}}
Output:
Continue Statement
When you want to skip to the next iteration but remain in the loop, you should use the
continue statement.
For example:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
int nb = 7;
nb--;
if (nb == 5)
continue;
printf("%d\n", nb);
}}
Output:
Selection of a loop is always a tough task for a programmer, to select a loop do the
following steps:
Analyze the problem and check whether it requires a pre-test or a post-test loop.
Summary
false.