0

I created a couple for loops that print lines as such (each new number starts a new line, it doesn't show here):

1
22
333
4444

etc. until it reaches 9 then goes back down to 1.

I am supposed to translate it into both a while and do while loop and have been trying for the past hour and can't seem to do it.

public static void main(String[] args) {  
   for (int x=1;  x <= 9; x++) {
       for (int y = 1; y <=x ; y++){
           System.out.print( x + "");
           }
       System.out.println();
       }

    // TODO code application logic here
  for (int x=9;  x >=1; x--) {
       for (int y = 1; y <=x ; y++){
           System.out.print( x + "");
           }
       System.out.println();

       }   int y =1;
  int x = 1;
  while (x <9){

      while (y <=x){
          y++;
  System.out.print(x +"");{
  }
  System.out.println();
}
 x++;
}
14
  • Show us what you have tried and we'll help you with that Oct 2, 2013 at 1:21
  • I tried editing and it wouldn't allow me, but I've tried: int y =1; int x = 1; while (x <9){ x++; while (y <=x){ y++; System.out.print(x +"");{ } System.out.println(); } it prints 1-9 but not the amount respective to the number. Oct 2, 2013 at 1:24
  • not the amount respective to the number? Hmm?
    – nhgrif
    Oct 2, 2013 at 1:24
  • @user2836944 post your tried code in your question
    – newuser
    Oct 2, 2013 at 1:26
  • Sorry I worded that poorly, what I mean is not "1, 22, 333, 4444" etc. Oct 2, 2013 at 1:26

3 Answers 3

4

A for loop statement has three parts in the for (init; condition; post). These parts are separated by semicolons. The init part specifies an initial statement, the condition is what determines if the loop body is executed or not and the post specifies a post loop statement.

You can do the same thing with a while loop except that instead of a single statement, it is actually several statements. However a while loop is not exactly like a for loop since the continue statement and how it behaves is a concern. More about that later.

A hint is that the various parts of the for statement are separated by semicolons which are also used to separate statements in Java.

Consider the following for loop source example.

int i;
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
  // for loop body
}

So you would have an init statement before the loop statement, i = 0 then the loop statement itself containing the condition, i < 5, and as the last line in the loop before the closing curly brace, you would put the post loop condition, i++.

The do while is a bit more complicated because of when the while condition is evaluated. In both the for loop and the while loop, the condition is evaluated and if the expression is not true then the loop body is not executed at all, it is skipped. In the case of the for loop, the init statement is executed and then the condition is evaluated to determine if the for loop body should be executed. Since a while loop does not have an init statement as part of the while statement, the condition is evaluated and if not true, the while loop body is not executed.

A do while loop has a condition that is not evaluated until after the first time through the do while loop body. So the statements within the do while loop are always executed at least once. Then the do while condition is evaluated and if true, execution returns to the top where the do is and the do while loop body is executed again.

Some code of several variations of loops where the init is i = 0 and where the condition is i < 5 and the post is i++. In all cases I have the variable i defined out side of the loop body. In the case of a for loop, defining the variable i within the for statement causes the scope of the variable i, its visibility, to be restricted to the for loop body which would not be the case for the other types of loops.

int i;
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
  // for loop body
}

int i = 0;
while (i < 5) {
  // while loop body
  i++;
}


int i = 0;
do {
  // do while loop body
  i++;
} while (i < 5);

I mentioned that what happens when the continue statement is executed can make a difference when comparing these forms of loops. The way to think of it is that when a continue statement is executed then there is a jump to the closing brace of the loop statement enclosing the continue statement. So this introduces something to consider.

Look at the above examples but with a continue statement. In all of the examples below there is a continue statement which causes execution to skip to the end of the loop body when the variable i has a value of 3.

With this change the for loop will continue incrementing the variable i because it's post, the third part of the for statement, is executed at the end of the loop. However with the while loop and the do while loop, the incrementing of the variable i is part of the loop body so when the continue is executed skipping to the end of the loop, the increment of the variable i is also skipped.

int i;
// first time init variable i to zero then evaluate condition
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {  //  evaluate condition and execute loop body if true
  // for loop body
  if (i == 3)
      continue;  // when i == 3 continue is executed to skip to end of loop
}  // at point of braces, post executed, condition evaluated

int i = 0;
while (i < 5) {     // evaluate condition and execute loop body if true
  // while loop body
  if (i == 3)
      continue;  // when i == 3 continue is executed to skip to end of loop
  i++;      // variable i only incremented when this statement is executed
}  // braces indicate end of loop so jump back to top of loop


int i = 0;
do {
  // do while loop body
  if (i == 3)
      continue;  // when i == 3 continue is executed to skip to end of loop
  // more statements which may be skipped by the continue
  i++;      // variable i only incremented when this statement is executed
} while (i < 5);  // evaluate condition and jump to top of loop if true

You could make a change to the do while loop while condition to move the incrementing of the variable i into the while condition evaluation by using a pre-increment operator, the ++ operator, on the variable as in the following. We use the pre-increment operator because we want to increment the variable i before we check its value.

int i = -1;    // need to start at -1 since the while will increment at beginning of the loop
while (++i < 5) { // increment variable i, evaluate condition and body of loop if true
  // while loop body
  if (i == 3)
      continue;  // when i == 3 continue is executed to skip to end of loop
}  // braces indicate end of loop so jump back to top of loop

int i = 0;
do {
  // do while loop body
  if (i == 3)
      continue;  // when i == 3 continue is executed to skip to end of loop
  // more statements which may be skipped by the continue
} while (++i < 5);  // increment variable i, evaluate condition and jump to top of loop if true
0

Try this as your while loop:

int y = 1;
int x = 1;

while (x < 9) {

    y = 1;
    while (y <= x) {
            y++;

        System.out.print(x + "");


    }
    System.out.println();
    x++;
}
1
  • Modified to X<10 instead of 9 and it prints properly, I'm going to try to figure the rest on my own and come back if I can't get it. Thank you for the help! Oct 2, 2013 at 2:15
0

A for loop is a construct that is extremely similar to a while loop, except that it provides some extra niceties that reduce boilerplate code.

The beginning of a for loop sets your initial variable (in your case, x), your condition clause (x <= 9) and your incrementor (x++). A while loop does not do these things for, it simply runs a block of code while the condition clause in the () is met.

Converting a for loop to a while is simple-

for(int x = 0; x < 10; x++) {

int x = 0;
while(x < 10) {
    x++;
}

The while loop has all the same features as the for loop, but without the syntactic sugar. This should help you convert the loops in your question, and in general.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.