As mentioned in all the answers here, any decent compiler would compile both loops into the same machine code.
Your machine code (taking MIPS as an ex) would be a bunch of normal assembly statements followed by a branch (onequal/notequal) in both cases making your efficiency consistent.
However, you could debate over the coding style issue over here (Not efficiency).
For Loops :
- Used when you know EXACTLY how many times the loop is going to run. Exit case is known.
- Know by the amount by which your loop is going to increment by on each iteration
*Probable Usage : When a collection of items already exists and you want to go over it and retrieve the number of times a certain property appears.
While Loops :
You're not aware of how many times the loop is going to run. There is an exit case which is set/reached sometime while the loop is running (if you want to simulate a for loop, you'll use something like a counter (extra code))
Do not know by how much your loop is going to increment by. Your increment/next move can be set dynamically. While you can do this in a for loop, you'll have to account for the increment at each iteration as well causing some unreadable code which can be avoided when if you use a while loop.
*Probable Usage : Grepping a stream for some data. You're not aware of how long the stream is so your exit case is when the stream ends. Since it's a stream and you might be getting data line by line, you might want to skip over white lines altogether making your increments not consistent.