86

What is an alternative function for the goto keyword in Java?

Since Java does not have a goto.

19
  • 10
    @harigm: Can you give an example of the kind of code that you would write if goto is available in Java? I think therein lies the more important issue. Mar 12, 2010 at 6:18
  • 3
    @harigm: I second polygene, could you please update your question to include why your program needs a goto?
    – Everyone
    Mar 12, 2010 at 7:16
  • 13
    People always talk about never using a goto, but I think there is a really good real world use case which is pretty well known and used.. That is, making sure to execute some code before a return from a function.. Usually its releasing locks or what not, but in my case I'd love to be able to jump to a break right before the return so I can do required mandatory cleanup. Of course a program littered with goto's all over the place would be horrible, but if restricted to method bodies it doesn't seem that bad as long as you follow a convention (only jump to the end of functions, never back up)
    – Matt Wolfe
    Sep 22, 2011 at 8:45
  • 7
    You're in good company. Linus Torvalds has passionately defended goto kerneltrap.org/node/553. Undoubtedly the most notable omission from Project Coin.
    – Fletch
    Dec 1, 2011 at 12:04
  • 7
    @MattWolfe doesn't try-finally do the job in that example? Sep 24, 2012 at 20:56

12 Answers 12

87

You could use a labeled BREAK statement:

search:
    for (i = 0; i < arrayOfInts.length; i++) {
        for (j = 0; j < arrayOfInts[i].length; j++) {
            if (arrayOfInts[i][j] == searchfor) {
                foundIt = true;
                break search;
            }
        }
    }

However, in properly designed code, you shouldn't need GOTO functionality.

12
  • 90
    This will not save you from the raptors!
    – Bobby
    Nov 2, 2010 at 18:50
  • 26
    Why should you not need goto functionality in properly designed code? Nov 16, 2011 at 17:42
  • 14
    Because assembly is the only one allowed to use it. A while statement, a for statement, a do-while, a foreach, a function call, all of these are GOTO statements used in a controlled and predictable manner. On the level of the assembler, it will always be GOTOs, but you should not need the functionality that pure GOTO gives you - its only advantage over functions and loop/control statements is that it lets you jump in the middle of any code, anywhere. And that 'advantage' is itself the definition of 'spaghetti code'.
    – user1086498
    Mar 16, 2012 at 22:34
  • 2
    @whatsthebeef Here's the famous 1968 letter by Edsger W. Dijkstra that explains why he considered goto harmful.
    – thomanski
    Apr 2, 2012 at 12:58
  • 12
    Context for "raptors", xkcd #292. Jan 31, 2014 at 16:28
43

There isn't any direct equivalent to the goto concept in Java. There are a few constructs that allow you to do some of the things you can do with a classic goto.

  • The break and continue statements allow you to jump out of a block in a loop or switch statement.
  • A labeled statement and break <label> allow you to jump out of an arbitrary compound statement to any level within a given method (or initializer block).
  • If you label a loop statement, you can continue <label> to continue with the next iteration of an outer loop from an inner loop.
  • Throwing and catching exceptions allows you to (effectively) jump out of many levels of a method call. (However, exceptions are relatively expensive and are considered to be a bad way to do "ordinary" control flow1.)
  • And of course, there is return.

None of these Java constructs allow you to branch backwards or to a point in the code at the same level of nesting as the current statement. They all jump out one or more nesting (scope) levels and they all (apart from continue) jump downwards. This restriction helps to avoid the goto "spaghetti code" syndrome inherent in old BASIC, FORTRAN and COBOL code2.


1- The most expensive part of exceptions is the actual creation of the exception object and its stacktrace. If you really, really need to use exception handling for "normal" flow control, you can either preallocate / reuse the exception object, or create a custom exception class that overrides the fillInStackTrace() method. The downside is that the exception's printStackTrace() methods won't give you useful information ... should you ever need to call them.

2 - The spaghetti code syndrome spawned the structured programming approach, where you limited in your use of the available language constructs. This could be applied to BASIC, Fortran and COBOL, but it required care and discipline. Getting rid of goto entirely was a pragmatically better solution. If you keep it in a language, there is always some clown who will abuse it.

3
  • Looping constructs like while(...){} and for(...){} allow you to repeat blocks of code without explicitly jumping to an arbitrary location. Also, method calls myMethod() allow you to execute code found elsewhere and return to the current block when finished. All of these can be used to replace functionality of goto while preventing the common problem of failing to return that goto allows.
    – Chris Nava
    Mar 12, 2010 at 15:00
  • @Chris - that is true, but most languages that support GOTO also have closer analogs to Java loop constructs.
    – Stephen C
    Mar 13, 2010 at 1:41
  • 1
    @Chris - classic FORTRAN has 'for' loops and classic COBOL also has looping constructs (though I can't recall the details). Only classic BASIC has no explicit looping constructs ...
    – Stephen C
    Nov 23, 2011 at 0:29
31

Just for fun, here is a GOTO implementation in Java.

Example:

   1 public class GotoDemo {
   2     public static void main(String[] args) {
   3         int i = 3;
   4         System.out.println(i);
   5         i = i - 1;
   6         if (i >= 0) {
   7             GotoFactory.getSharedInstance().getGoto().go(4);
   8         }
   9         
  10         try {
  11             System.out.print("Hell");
  12             if (Math.random() > 0) throw new Exception();            
  13             System.out.println("World!");
  14         } catch (Exception e) {
  15             System.out.print("o ");
  16             GotoFactory.getSharedInstance().getGoto().go(13);
  17         }
  18     }
  19 }

Running it:

$ java -cp bin:asm-3.1.jar GotoClassLoader GotoDemo           
   3
   2
   1
   0
   Hello World!

Do I need to add "don't use it!"?

5
  • 2
    Bug: Math.random() can return 0. It should be >=
    – poitroae
    Aug 20, 2012 at 11:09
  • Yes well. Anything that can only be implemented by bytecode hackery isn't really Java ...
    – Stephen C
    Mar 20, 2013 at 9:20
  • Is there something similar that supports labels instead of line numbers ?
    – Behrouz.M
    Oct 13, 2016 at 13:15
  • 1
    The link to an implementation is broken.
    – LarsH
    Apr 24, 2018 at 9:51
  • 1
    @poitroae It's a fun Easter egg that somebody will find HellWorld!o World! output and be bewildered. #AllBugsAreFeatures Nov 13, 2020 at 15:34
18

While some commenters and downvoters argue that this isn't goto, the generated bytecode from the below Java statements really suggests that these statements really do express goto semantics.

Specifically, the do {...} while(true); loop in the second example is optimised by Java compilers in order not to evaluate the loop condition.

Jumping forward

label: {
  // do stuff
  if (check) break label;
  // do more stuff
}

In bytecode:

2  iload_1 [check]
3  ifeq 6          // Jumping forward
6  ..

Jumping backward

label: do {
  // do stuff
  if (check) continue label;
  // do more stuff
  break label;
} while(true);

In bytecode:

 2  iload_1 [check]
 3  ifeq 9
 6  goto 2          // Jumping backward
 9  ..
10
  • How does the do/while jump backwards? It still just breaks out of the block. Counter Example: label: do {System.out.println("Backward"); continue label;} while(false); I think in your example the while(true) is what is responsible for the backwards jump. Dec 31, 2012 at 22:33
  • @BenHolland: continue label is the jump backwards
    – Lukas Eder
    Jan 1, 2013 at 11:11
  • I'm still not convinced. The continue statement skips the current iteration of a for, while, or do-while loop. The continue skips to the end of the loop's body, which is then evaluated for the boolean expression that controls the loop. The while is what is jumping backwards not the continue. See docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/branch.html Jan 5, 2013 at 19:55
  • @BenHolland: Technically you're right. From a logical perspective, if // do stuff and // do more stuff are the statements of interest, continue label "has the effect" of jumping backwards (due to the while(true) statement of course). I wasn't aware that this was such a precise question, though...
    – Lukas Eder
    Jan 5, 2013 at 22:52
  • 2
    @BenHolland: I updated the answer. The while(true) is translated by the compiler into a goto bytecode operation. As true is a constant literal, the compiler can do this optimisation and doesn't have to evaluate anything. So, my example really is a goto, jumping backwards...
    – Lukas Eder
    Jan 6, 2013 at 19:40
6

If you really want something like goto statements, you could always try breaking to named blocks.

You have to be within the scope of the block to break to the label:

namedBlock: {
  if (j==2) {
    // this will take you to the label above
    break namedBlock;
  }
}

I won't lecture you on why you should avoid goto's - I'm assuming you already know the answer to that.

1
  • 2
    I tried implementing this in my SO question linked here. It actually doesn't take you to the "label above," perhaps I misinterpreted the author's statements, but for clarity I'll add that it takes you to the end of the outer block (the "labeled" block), which is below where you are breaking. Hence you cannot "break" upwards. At least that is my understanding.
    – NameSpace
    Mar 20, 2014 at 0:33
4
public class TestLabel {

    enum Label{LABEL1, LABEL2, LABEL3, LABEL4}

    /**
     * @param args
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Label label = Label.LABEL1;

        while(true) {
            switch(label){
                case LABEL1:
                    print(label);

                case LABEL2:
                    print(label);
                    label = Label.LABEL4;
                    continue;

                case LABEL3:
                    print(label);
                    label = Label.LABEL1;
                    break;

                case LABEL4:
                    print(label);
                    label = Label.LABEL3;
                    continue;
            }
            break;
        }
    }

    public final static void print(Label label){
        System.out.println(label);
    }
3
  • This will result in a StackOverFlowException is you run it long enough, thus my need to goto. Jun 10, 2012 at 16:04
  • 3
    @Kevin: How will this lead to a stack overflow? There's no recursion in this algorithm...
    – Lukas Eder
    Nov 21, 2012 at 13:32
  • 1
    This looks very much like the original proof that any program can be written without using "goto" - by turning it into a while loop with a "label" variable which is ten times worse than any goto.
    – gnasher729
    Jun 12, 2014 at 22:21
3

StephenC writes:

There are two constructs that allow you to do some of the things you can do with a classic goto.

One more...

Matt Wolfe writes:

People always talk about never using a goto, but I think there is a really good real world use case which is pretty well known and used.. That is, making sure to execute some code before a return from a function.. Usually its releasing locks or what not, but in my case I'd love to be able to jump to a break right before the return so I can do required mandatory cleanup.

try {
    // do stuff
    return result;  // or break, etc.
}
finally {
    // clean up before actually returning, even though the order looks wrong.
}

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/finally.html

The finally block always executes when the try block exits. This ensures that the finally block is executed even if an unexpected exception occurs. But finally is useful for more than just exception handling — it allows the programmer to avoid having cleanup code accidentally bypassed by a return, continue, or break. Putting cleanup code in a finally block is always a good practice, even when no exceptions are anticipated.

The silly interview question associated with finally is: If you return from a try{} block, but have a return in your finally{} too, which value is returned?

1
  • 2
    I disagree that that is a silly interview question. An experienced Java programmer should know what happens, if only to understand why putting a return in a finally block is a bad idea. (And even if the knowledge is not strictly necessary, I'd be worried by a programmer who didn't have the curiosity to find out ...)
    – Stephen C
    Nov 16, 2014 at 1:35
1

The easiest is:

int label = 0;
loop:while(true) {
    switch(state) {
        case 0:
            // Some code
            state = 5;
            break;

        case 2:
            // Some code
            state = 4;
            break;
        ...
        default:
            break loop;
    }
}
0

Try the code below. It works for me.

for (int iTaksa = 1; iTaksa <=8; iTaksa++) { // 'Count 8 Loop is  8 Taksa

    strTaksaStringStar[iCountTaksa] = strTaksaStringCount[iTaksa];

    LabelEndTaksa_Exit : {
        if (iCountTaksa == 1) { //If count is 6 then next it's 2
            iCountTaksa = 2;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 2) { //If count is 2 then next it's 3
            iCountTaksa = 3;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 3) { //If count is 3 then next it's 4
            iCountTaksa = 4;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 4) { //If count is 4 then next it's 7
            iCountTaksa = 7;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 7) { //If count is 7 then next it's 5
            iCountTaksa = 5;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 5) { //If count is 5 then next it's 8
            iCountTaksa = 8;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 8) { //If count is 8 then next it's 6
            iCountTaksa = 6;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }

        if (iCountTaksa == 6) { //If count is 6 then loop 1  as 1 2 3 4 7 5 8 6  --> 1
            iCountTaksa = 1;
            break  LabelEndTaksa_Exit;
        }
    }   //LabelEndTaksa_Exit : {

} // "for (int iTaksa = 1; iTaksa <=8; iTaksa++) {"
0

In modern Java I would just use switch and String. I am surprised that I couldn't find this answer:

for (String label = "start";;) {
    switch (label) {
        case "start":
           ...
        case "something":
           ...
        case "whatever":
           ...
           label = "something"; break; // <== those two commands equal goto
           ...
        default:
           return;
    }

}
-1

Use a labeled break as an alternative to goto.

1
  • This answer is, and always was redundant
    – Stephen C
    Apr 13, 2017 at 7:56
-1

Java doesn't have goto, because it makes the code unstructured and unclear to read. However, you can use break and continue as civilized form of goto without its problems.


Jumping forward using break -

ahead: {
    System.out.println("Before break");
    break ahead;
    System.out.println("After Break"); // This won't execute
}
// After a line break ahead, the code flow starts from here, after the ahead block
System.out.println("After ahead");

Output:

Before Break
After ahead

Jumping backward using continue

before: {
    System.out.println("Continue");
    continue before;
}

This will result in an infinite loop as every time the line continue before is executed, the code flow will start again from before.

1
  • 2
    Your example on jumping backward using continue is wrong. You cannot use "continue" outside the body of a loop, it cause a compile error. Inside a loop, however, continue simply jumps the loop conditional. So something like while(true){continue;} would be an infinite loop, but so is while(true){} for that matter. Feb 20, 2015 at 0:06

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