I am experimenting about what can be put into a for loop declaration in C and how it can be used. I tried the following:
#include <stdio.h>
int stupid(int a)
{
if(a == 3)
return 1;
else
return 3;
}
int main(void)
{
int i, j;
for(i=0; stupid(i)==3,i<10; i++)
printf("%d\n", i);
return 0;
}
When I run the program it just prints the number from 1 to 10, and if I use &&
instead of comma between the stupid(i)==3
and i<10
, then the program just prints the numbers up to 3. Why?
I don't really understand how this works and I was expecting the loop to pass all numbers and "skip" 3, but continue up to 10 and that's not really happening. Why does this happen? Is there some site where this is more clearly explained?
if (i != 3)
in front ofprintf
. The loop will terminate as soon as it detectsi == 3
otherwise instead of just skipping over all the functions inside it. I'm not entirely sure if this answers your question.if
on the same line as thefor
and only have one set of braces - in effect a for loop that conditionally skips certain items without exiting. In your case, though, you only have one statement in the loop anyway. You still need anif
to skip particular items without stopping the loop, but without braces, you don't get the visual appearance of a single block construct.for
loop, it would be something like this :for(i=0;i<10;i += (i == 2 ? 2 : 1)) printf("%d\n",i);
. Note that this is horrible and if you ever turned this in for homework I'd fail you on principle.