One of my friends is teaching a programming class with Javascript and one of his assignments was to create a number guessing game. This was his example implementation:
funProgram: for(;;) {
numberGuesser: {
var num = (Math.random() * 100) | 0;
var guess = +prompt("I'm thinking of a number between 0 and 100. Try to guess it.", 0);
var guesses = 1;
guess: for(;;) {
higher: {
lower: {
if(guess === num) break guess;
if(guess > num) break lower;
guess = +prompt("Too low. Try again.", 0);
break higher;
}
guess = +prompt("Too high. Try again.", 0);
}
guesses++;
}
alert("You got it in " + guesses + " guesses! The number is " + num);
}
var again = prompt("Do you want to guess again (y/n)?", "y") === "y";
if(!again) break funProgram;
}
He told me that it's a good practice to label your code and wrap blocks around it so you can easily see what each section is doing. He also said labeled breaks and continues are much easier to read than unlabeled ones because you can know exactly what you are breaking out of. I've never seen any code patterns like this, so I'm not sure if this is true.
I've been using Javascript for a while and there are a few things in here that I've never seen before and some things that I still don't understand. I thought that the break
keyword was specifically meant for breaking out of loops. The higher
and lower
blocks are not loops, but apparently you can still break out of it. How is that possible? It seems odd to me to break out of something that doesn't loop. Can you also break out of functions using the break
keyword?