26

Suppose I have a piece of Perl code like:

foreach my $x (@x) {
 foreach my $y (@z) {
  foreach my $z (@z) {
   if (something()) {
    # I want to break free!
   }
   # do stuff 
  }
  # do stuff
 }
 # do stuff
}

If something() is true, I would like to break ('last') all the loops.

how can I do that? I thought of two options, both of which I don't like: Using something GOTO Adding a boolean variable which will mark something() is true, check this var in each of the loops before they resume and last() if it's true.

Any suggestions or thoughts?

Thanks.

1
  • 7
    In Perl, the comment token is spelled #, not //.
    – daxim
    Sep 14, 2010 at 13:32

3 Answers 3

48

Use a label:

OUTER:
foreach my $x (@x) {
 foreach my $y (@z) {
  foreach my $z (@z) {
   if (something()) {
    last OUTER;
   }
   # do stuff 
  }
  # do stuff
 }
 # do stuff
}
16

The "last LABEL" syntax is described in the documentation.

-1

Note that you can also do this in a one liner. Use the keyword LINE. e.g. perl -ane 'next if length$F[5]!=1; for(split/,/,$F[6]){next LINE if length$_!=1}; print'

0

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.