There are a number of things you can do here. Ultimately what you do should depend on your coding style and what you are trying to accomplish.
Option 1 would be some variation of:
for (;;)
{
int number = /* ... */;
myMethod(number);
if (number == -10)
break;
}
You might say, rather subjectively and depending on circumstances, that this is bad, because knowledge of the termination condition is contained in the loop rather than the method doing the "real work". Maybe for your loop that's OK. Maybe in other circumstances (or perhaps with other programmers? This is very much a matter of taste.) you might want to make myMethod
make that decision. In general my own personal taste usually leans towards not having scenario knowledge be distributed throughout various methods in source, but in one place.
So most of what I'll write from here on will be how to make myMethod
make the decision about whether or not to terminate.
Option 2 - myMethod
returns a boolean indicating we should terminate:
for (;;)
{
int number = /* ... */;
if (myMethod(number))
break;
}
boolean myMethod(int number)
{
// TODO - do stuff
return number == -10;
}
But you might say that myMethod
already wants to return some other type. I come from very much a C background so the idiom I'm most used to would be the "out parameter". Leading me to option 3:
Option 3 - Out parameter lets caller decide to terminate:
public class CancelIndicator
{
public boolean shouldCancel;
};
CancelIndicator cancel = new CancelIndicator();
while (!cancel.shouldCancel)
{
int number = /* ... */;
myMethod(number, cancel);
}
int myMethod(int number, CancelIndicator cancel)
{
// TODO - do stuff.
cancel.shouldCancel = (number == -10);
return /* ... */;
}
Or maybe you're more a fan of exceptions:
Option 3:
public class CancellationException extends Exception
{
}
try
{
for (;;)
{
int number = /* ... */;
myMethod(numberl);
}
}
catch (CancellationException ex)
{
}
void myMethod(int number) throws CancellationException
{
// TODO - do stuff.
if (number == -10)
throw new CancellationException();
}
As you can see there are a number of options. I'm sure one could spend a whole day talking about different ways to do it. Here is my sample of idioms I have seen - I'll warn you that it's been some time since I've done much in Java so I might not write the most idiomatic code here. :-)