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I am converting some Java code to C# and have found a few labelled "break" statements (e.g.)

label1:
    while (somethingA) {
       ...
        while (somethingB) {
            if (condition) {
                break label1;
            }
        }
     }

Is there an equivalent in C# (current reading suggests not) and if not is there any conversion other than (say) having bool flags to indicate whether to break at each loop end (e.g.)

bool label1 = false;
while (somethingA)
{
   ...
    while (somethingB)
    {
        if (condition)
        {
            label1 = true;
            break;
        }
    }
    if (label1)
    {
        break;
    }
}
// breaks to here

I'd be interested as to why C# doesn't have this as it doesn't seem to be very evil.

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1 Answer

vote up 7 vote down check

You can just use goto to jump directly to a label.

while (somethingA)
{
    // ...
    while (somethingB)
    {
        if (condition)
        {
            goto label1;
        }
    }
}
label1:
   // ...

In C-like languages, goto often ends up cleaner for breaking nested loops, as opposed to keeping track of boolean variables and repeatedly checking them at the end of each loop.

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@Mark thanks, I didn't realise C# allowed goto's. – peter.murray.rust Oct 10 at 15:01
1  
You're welcome. I didn't realize Java had labeled statements, so that makes us even :P – Mark Rushakoff Oct 10 at 15:03

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