For Statement In C
The
for
statement is a somewhat generalized while
that lets us put the initialization and increment parts of a loop into a single statement along with the test. The general form of the for
isfor( initialization; expression; increment ) statementThe meaning is exactly
initialization; while( expression ) { statement increment; }Thus, the following code does the same array copy as the example in the previous section:
for( i=0; (t[i]=s[i]) != '\0'; i++ );This slightly more ornate example adds up the elements of an array:
sum = 0; for( i=0; i<n; i++) sum = sum + array[i];In the for statement, the initialization can be left out if you want, but the semicolon has to be there. The increment is also optional. It is not followed by a semicolon. The second clause, the test, works the same way as in the
while
: if the expression is true (not zero) do another loop, otherwise get on with the next statement. As with the while
, the for loop may be done zero times. If the expression is left out, it is taken to be always true, sofor( ; ; ) ...and
while( 1 ) ...are both infinite loops.You might ask why we use a
for
since it's so much like a while
. (You might also ask why we use a while
because...) The for
is usually preferable because it keeps the code where it's used and sometimes eliminates the need for compound statements, as in this code that zeros a two-dimensional array:for( i=0; i<n; i++ ) for( j=0; j<m; j++ ) array[i][j] = 0;
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