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The code below should ask the user his weight and if the user puts > 15 it should do a while loop to increase it to 50 The code compiles successfully but no matter if you put > 15 it wont do the while loop.

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

int main()
{


int weight;

cout << "Current weight?" << endl;
cin >> weight;
cout << "Your weight:" << weight << endl;
if (weight > 15) {
        while (weight == 50) {
            weight = weight + 1;
            cout << "Weight:" << weight << endl;
        }
}
return 0;
}
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  • It is doing the while loop.. its only printing at 50
    – N Kumar
    Oct 3, 2015 at 21:22

4 Answers 4

5
while(weight==50){
    weight = weight +1;
    cout <<"Weight:"<<weight<<endl;
}

The above loop will keep on going as long as weight is equal to 50 which, by judging from what you have written in the question, is not what you are looking for.

To fix the problem, change the loop-condition into something more suitable; didn't you want to keep on looping as long as weight is less-than 50?

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  • But == means equal to,so shouldn't it actually run until its 50? Thanks for the help as you helped me fix it,but I just dont understand why == didnt work.
    – Scott Kim
    Oct 3, 2015 at 21:28
  • 2
    @ScottKim No, the condition governs if the loop should keep on going or not, it does not mean "when it is time to stop". while (weight == 50) work; says that we should keep doing work as long as weight is 50. Oct 3, 2015 at 21:30
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A while loop statement in C/C++ programming language repeatedly executes a target statement as long as a given condition is true.

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  • While loop is executed until condition becomes false. Oct 3, 2015 at 21:23
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weight ==50 condition will fail if you enter weight value other than fifty. To do what you have mentioned modify condition in while loop.

weight == 50

to

weight < 50
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If you ran this program step-by-step, using a debugger, and you added watches of the values of variables, you would see what's going on.

Your development environment (what you use to write code) likely has an integrated debugger; alternatively, use another dev. env.'s debugger, or a stand-alone debugger like gdb for the command line, kdbg for KDE, ddd for any X environment etc. (those are all on Linux; other platforms may have other debuggers).

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