vote up 9 vote down star

Hi,

I'm writing some code that looks like this:

while(true) {
    switch(msg->state) {
    case MSGTYPE: // ... 
        break;
    // ... more stuff ...
    case DONE:
        break; // **HERE, I want to break out of the loop itself**
    }
}

Is there any direct way to do that?

I know I can use a flag, and break from the loop by putting a conditional break just after the switch. I just want to know if C++ has some construct for this already.

Thanks,
jrh

flag

11  
Why do you need a conditional break after the switch? Just change your while from while(true) to while(flag)... – Tal Pressman Sep 14 at 7:02
2  
while(true) is bad form. – Dave Jarvis Sep 14 at 7:35
@Dave_Jarvis I assume that this is a simplified version that he has put in here to illustrate what he was trying to do. – Alterlife Sep 14 at 7:50
See: Code Complete (2nd Edn). See also 'Structured Programming with goto statements' by D E Knuth (pplab.snu.ac.kr/courses/adv_pl05/…). – Jonathan Leffler Sep 14 at 7:52
2  
If feels like getting an advice to quit smoking when all you want to know is how to get to the nearest subway station. – hacker Sep 14 at 9:54
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12 Answers

vote up 25 vote down check

while( true )

The following code should be considered bad form, regardless of language or desired functionality:

while( true ) {
}

Reasons

The while( true ) loop is poor form because it:

  • Breaks the implied contract of a while loop.
    • The while loop declaration should explicitly state the only exit condition.
  • Implies that it loops forever.
    • Code within the loop must be read to understand the terminating clause.
    • Loops that repeat forever prevent the user from terminating the program from within the program.
  • Is inefficient.
    • There are multiple loop termination conditions, including checking for "true".
  • Is prone to bugs.
    • Cannot easily determine where to put code that will always execute for each iteration.
  • Is more difficult to prove as correct.

Alternative to Goto

The following code is better form:

while( validState() ) {
  execute();
}

int validState() {
  return msg->state != DONE;
}

Advantages

No flag. No goto. No exception. Easy to change. Easy to read. Easy to fix. Additionally the code:

  1. Isolates the knowledge of the loop's workload from the loop itself.
  2. Allows someone maintaining the code to easily extend the functionality.
  3. Allows multiple terminating conditions to be assigned in one place.
  4. Separates the terminating clause from the code to execute.
  5. Is safer for Nuclear Power plants. ;-)

The second point is important. Without knowing how the code works, if someone asked me to make the main loop let other threads (or processes) have some CPU time, two solutions come to mind:

Option #1

Readily insert the pause:

while( validState() ) {
  execute();
  sleep();
}

Option #2

Override execute:

void execute() {
  super->execute();
  sleep();
}

This code is simpler (and consequently clearer) than trying to change the loop with an embedded switch statement. The validState method should not do any work except to determine whether the loop should continue. The workhorse of the method is execute.

link|flag
7  
“Considered Harmful” Essays Considered Harmful - meyerweb.com/eric/comment/chech.html – Kobi Sep 14 at 7:40
See: Code Complete (2nd Edn). See also 'Structured Programming with goto statements' by D E Knuth (pplab.snu.ac.kr/courses/adv_pl05/…). – Jonathan Leffler Sep 14 at 7:46
Although the title of this answer may not be the best - I'd say the content is very good and well explained. You'd never see while(true) in any of my code and this post explains all of the reasons why. Up vote from me. – Paulius Maruška Sep 14 at 8:00
2  
Reasons why I disagree: while(true) and for(;;;) are not confusing (unlike do{}while(true)) because they state what they're doing right up front. It is actually easier to look for "break" statements than parse an arbitrary loop condition and look for where it's set, and no harder to prove correctness. The argument about where to put code is just as intractable in the presence of a continue statement, and not much better with if statements. The efficiency argument is positively silly. – David Thornley Sep 14 at 17:15
1  
@Dave Jarvis: We do seem to have some serious differences of opinion. Personally, I don't see that typing /break is any harder than looking for where a sentinel variable changes (and the original example would require a sentinel variable if there was any processing to be done if msg->state == DONE). I looked for efficiencies in the Knuth article, and found stuff that was basically irrelevant (12% improvement from adding a sentinel value) and stuff that was valid 35 years ago. I saw nothing applicable to while(true) at all. – David Thornley Sep 14 at 20:08
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vote up 0 vote down

The simplest way to do it is to put a simple IF before you do the SWITCH , and that IF test your condition for exiting the loop .......... as simple as it can be

link|flag
vote up -1 vote down

If I remember C++ syntax well, you can add a label to break statements, just like for goto. So what you want would be easily written:

while(true) {
    switch(msg->state) {
    case MSGTYPE: // ...
        break;
    // ... more stuff ...
    case DONE:
        break outofloop; // **HERE, I want to break out of the loop itself**
    }
}

outofloop:
// rest of your code here
link|flag
Unfortunately, your memory is faulty. It would be a nice feature, on those rare occasions where it would be useful. (I've seen proposals for number of levels to break from, but those look to me like bugs waiting to happen.) – David Thornley Sep 14 at 20:10
That must have been Java, then. Thanks for answering. And, of course, you're right with the rest, too. – Andrei Vajna II Sep 14 at 20:31
vote up 10 vote down

An alternate solution is to use the keyword continue in combination with break, i.e.:

for (;;) {
    switch(msg->state) {
    case MSGTYPE
        // code
        continue; // continue with loop
    case DONE:
        break;
    }
    break;
}

Use the continue statement to finish each case label where you want the loop to continue and use the break statement to finish case labels that should terminate the loop.

Of course this solution only works if there is no additional code to execute after the switch statement.

link|flag
While this is indeed very elegant, it has the disadvantage that most developers first have to look at it for a minute in order to understand how/whether this works. :( – sbi Sep 15 at 12:27
vote up 4 vote down

You could put your switch into a separate function like this:

bool myswitchfunction()
{
    switch(msg->state) {
    case MSGTYPE: // ... 
        break;
    // ... more stuff ...
    case DONE:
        return false; // **HERE, I want to break out of the loop itself**
    }
    return true;
}

while(myswitchfunction())
    ;
link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Even if you don't like goto, do not use an exception to exit a loop. The following sample shows how ugly it could be:

try {
  while ( ... ) {
    switch( ... ) {
      case ...:
        throw 777; // I'm afraid of goto
     }
  }
}
catch ( int )
{
}

I would use goto as in this answer. In this case goto will make code more clear then any other option. I hope that this question will be helpful.

But I think that using goto is the only option here because of the string while(true). You should consider refactoring of your loop. I'd suppose the following solution:

bool end_loop = false;
while ( !end_loop ) {
    switch( msg->state ) {
    case MSGTYPE: // ... 
        break;
    // ... more stuff ...
    case DONE:
        end_loop = true; break;
    }
}

Or even the following:

while ( msg->state != DONE ) {
    switch( msg->state ) {
    case MSGTYPE: // ... 
        break;
    // ... more stuff ...
}
link|flag
Yeah, but I like exceptions even less ;-) – quamrana Sep 14 at 7:20
1  
Using an exception to emulate a goto is of course worse than actually using a goto! It will probably also be significantly slower. – therefromhere Sep 14 at 7:22
2  
@Downvoter: It is because I state, that you shouldn't use exception, or because I suggest refactoring? – Kirill V. Lyadvinsky Sep 14 at 7:29
Not the down-voter - but... Your answer isn't clear whether you are proposing or condemning the idea of using an exception to exit the loop. Maybe the first sentence should be: "Even if you don't like goto, do not use an exception to exit a loop:"? – Jonathan Leffler Sep 14 at 7:50
1  
@Jonathan Leffler, Thanks, you showed the sample of valuable comment. updated the answer keeping in mind your comments. – Kirill V. Lyadvinsky Sep 14 at 8:42
vote up -7 vote down

It is always (!) better to use something else than "goto":

bool breakLoop = false;  
while(true) {  
    switch(msg->state) {  
    case MSGTYPE: // ...  
        break;  
    // ... more stuff ...  
    case DONE:  
        breakLoop = true;  
        break; // **HERE, I want to break out of the loop itself**  
    }  
    if ( breakLoop )  
        break;  
}
link|flag
6  
It is not "always" better to use something other than goto. There is a place and a time for direct jumps; they simply should not be abused. – Dav Sep 14 at 7:02
Please markup the code. – Ikke Sep 14 at 7:03
6  
Why not just do "while(!breakLoop)" instead of adding the additional if and break? – Tal Pressman Sep 14 at 7:04
4  
goto is just fine if used sparingly - it's almost never a good idea to use it, but not always bad. – snemarch Sep 14 at 7:23
-1: In this case goto is a good solution. – Johannes Schaub - litb Sep 14 at 18:01
vote up 3 vote down

There's no C++ construct for breaking out of the loop in this case.

Either use a flag to interrupt the loop or (if appropriate) extract your code into a function and use return.

link|flag
vote up 13 vote down

A neatish way to do this would be to put this into a function:

int yourfunc() {

    while(true) {

        switch(msg->state) {
        case MSGTYPE: // ... 
            break;
        // ... more stuff ...
        case DONE:
            return; 
        }

    }
}

Optionally (but 'bad practices'): as already suggested you could use a goto, or throw an exception inside the switch.

link|flag
3  
Exception should be used to, well, throw an exception, not a well know behavior of a function. – Clement Herreman Sep 14 at 7:04
I agree with Afterlife: Put it in a function. – dalle Sep 14 at 7:06
6  
Throwing an exception is really evil in this case. It means "I want to use a goto, but I read somewhere that I should not use them, so I'll go with a subterfuge and pretend to look smart". – Gorpik Sep 14 at 7:07
No. while(true) is the culprit; breaking out of the loop anywhere other than the condition of the while loop is poor style. – Dave Jarvis Sep 14 at 7:26
I agree that throwing an exception or using a goto is a terrible idea, but they are working options and have been listed as such in my answer. – Alterlife Sep 14 at 7:53
show 1 more comment
vote up 7 vote down

AFAIK there is no "double break" or similar construct in C++. The closest would be a goto - which, while it has a bad connotation to its name, exists in the language for a reason - as long as it's used carefully and sparingly, it's quite a viable option.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You could potentially use goto.

But I would prefer to set a flag that stops the loop.
Then break out of the switch.

link|flag
vote up 38 vote down

You can use goto.

while ( ... ) {
   switch( ... ) {
     case ...:
         goto exit_loop;

   }
}
exit_loop: ;
link|flag
4  
Just don't go wild with that keyword. – Fragsworth Sep 14 at 6:56
10  
It's funny I get downvoted because people don't like goto. The OP clearly mentioned without using flags. Can you suggest a better way, considering the OP's limitation? :) – Mehrdad Afshari Sep 14 at 6:57
5  
upvoted just t to compensate mindless goto haters. I guess Mehrdad knew he's going to lose a couple of points for suggesting sensible solution here. – hacker Sep 14 at 7:17
3  
+1. I understand this is more of a theoretical than a practical question; it clearly asks for a jump instruction. Given that break, continue and return are unsuitable, the only answer is the general jump: goto. This said, while (flag) would be a superior construct, but not what the OP asked for. – Gorpik Sep 14 at 7:18
2  
+1, there is no better way imho, even when considering the OPs limitations. Flags are ugly, break up logic across the whole loop and thus more difficult to grasp. – Johannes Schaub - litb Sep 14 at 17:46
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