You want to repeat something until a condition is satisfied. That is the definition of a loop, and there are many ways to write loops in C++. The example you showed is best handled using a do-while
loop:
int a;
do
{
cout << "What's 2+2?";
cin >> a;
if (a == 4) {
cout << "Nice!";
break;
}
cout << "WRONG! Try again!";
}
while (true);
Though you could use a while
or for
loop instead:
int a;
while (true)
{
cout << "What's 2+2?";
cin >> a;
if (a == 4) {
cout << "Nice!";
break;
}
cout << "WRONG! Try again!";
}
int a;
for(;;)
{
cout << "What's 2+2?";
cin >> a;
if (a == 4) {
cout << "Nice!";
break;
}
cout << "WRONG! Try again!";
}
That being said, to answer your actual question, you can use a goto
statement without any other looping instructions:
int a;
askTheUser:
cout << "What's 2+2?";
cin >> a;
if (a != 4) {
cout << "WRONG! Try again!";
goto askTheUser;
}
cout << "Nice!";
But, goto
is rarely used in modern coding, it is not likely to perform any better than a do-while
loop after compiler optimizations are applied, and it has limitations on how it can be used.
for
loop