do-while:
do
{
i++;
++j;
System.out.println( i * j );
}
while ((i < 10) && (j*j != 25));
I am learning about do-while vs while at the moment and would like to rewrite the above java fragment (already declared and initialized) using a while instead. Are the below rewritten codes correct way to do so:
while:
while ((i < 10) && (j*j != 25))
{
i++;
++j;
System.out.println( i * j );
}
Cheers
The difference between a do-while
and a while
is when the comparison is done. With a do-while
, you'll compare at the end and hence do at least one iteration.
Equivalent code for your example
do
{
i++;
++j;
System.out.println( i * j );
}
while ((i < 10) && (j*j != 25));
is equivalent to:
i++;
++j;
System.out.println( i * j );
while ((i < 10) && (j*j != 25)) {
i++;
++j;
System.out.println( i * j );
}
General comprehension
A do-while
loop is an exit controlled loop which means that it exits at the end. A while
loop is an entry controlled loop which means that the condition is tested at the beginning and as a consequence, the code inside the loop might not even be executed.
do {
<block>
} while (<condition>);
is equivalent to:
<block>
while (<condition>) {
<block>
};
Use case
A typical use case for a do-while
is the following: you ask the user something and you want do repeat the operation while the input is not correct.
do {
// Ask something
} while (input is not correct);
In that case, you want to ask at least once and it's usually more elegant than using a while
which would require either to duplicate code, or to add an extra condition or setting an arbitrary value to force entering the loop the first time.
At the opposite, while
loops are much more commons and can easily replace a do-while
(not all languages have both loops).
The key difference between do-while
and while
, with do-while
you are guaranteed at least one run of your code before the checks.
*It does not need to get anymore complicated than that.
No, the two codes are not equivalent. do-while
only checks the condition at the end of the loop so i++
, ++j
and System.out.println(i * j)
happen at least once regardless of the initial values of i
and j
. while
skips the entire loop if the condition isn't true
for the first time the loop is entered.
You can achieve the same effect with while
by copying the loop's body once before the loop, for instance.
Do-While loops are pretty useful for cases like these, where you ask the user a question, and the user has to answer it for the program to terminate.
For example, this code:
import java.util.Scanner;
public class DoWhile {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int answer;
do {
System.out.println("What is 5+5?");
Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);
answer = scan.nextInt();
} while (answer != 10);
}
}