# Finicky Counter
# Demonstrates the break and continue statements
count = 0
while True:
count += 1
# end loop if count greater than 10
if count > 10:
break
# skip 5
if count == 5:
continue
print(count)
input("\n\nPress the enter key to exit.")
Why does the while True loop apply to count in this circumstance? I dont understand why the boolean is gauging the result of count. Wouldn't the correct syntax be:
while count:
Any help clarifying this would be appreciated.
while True:
loops forever. Thebreak
is the only thing that will stop that loop.True
is a boolean value that is built into Python.while x:
looks atx
on each iteration, and ifbool(X)
isTrue
, then it continues to loop, otherwise it stops. Asx
isTrue
here,bool(True)
is alwaysTrue
, and so the loop will never stop (well, except for something else stopping it - an exception or abreak
statement).