0

I'm new to C++ programming.

I just want to know if there is any way to go back to a certain point in the code without using a while or a do-while loop.

Here is an example:

int a; 

cout << "What's 2+2?";
cin >> a;
if (a==4) {cout << "Nice!";}
else {cout << "WRONG! Try again!";}

So, if the player fails, I want to ask the question again, so going back to:

cout << "What's 2+2?";

Is there any way to do it without using a loop?

1
  • You could use a for loop
    – M.M
    Aug 3, 2017 at 22:23

5 Answers 5

1

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.

4
  • 1
    I'm curious as to why you say do-while is the best-fitting solution - I always found popular opinion to be that while loops are usually more readable and intuitive, and this situation doesn't have logic that makes it messy to force the loop to always execute at least once.
    – hnefatl
    Aug 3, 2017 at 22:09
  • A while (and for) loop evaluates its condition before the first iteration is run, which is a waste of CPU time if the condition is always true initially. Those loops are intended for running 0+ iterations. A do-while loop delays the evaluation until after the first iteration is finished. It is intended for running 1+ iterations. And besides, an optimizing compiler that is smart enough to recognize the initial condition is always true is likely to rework a while loop into a do-while loop, so it is best to just be explicit about it. Aug 3, 2017 at 22:20
  • Thank you so much! I didn't even know about the goto. It seems like it's the best fitting for my scenario (which is not the one that I wrote; that was just an example).
    – Frank Z.
    Aug 3, 2017 at 22:28
  • @FrankZ. Be careful with the goto. While it is sometimes the correct choice, that sometimes comes very rarely, and even on those rare occasions you will have to deal with raised eyebrows and occasionally screaming hordes of anti-goto fanatics. Quite often what looks like a job for goto is actually a better job for a function. Aug 3, 2017 at 22:41
1

The preferred language construct for executing a block of code more than once is a loop, which can be of a for, a do-while, or a while form. So I'd write the code as follows:

int a;
bool correctGuess = false;

while (!correctGuess) {
  cout << "What's 2+2?";
  cin >> a;
  if (a==4) {cout << "Nice!"; correctGuess = true; }
  else { cout << "WRONG! Try again!"; }
}

Another way would be the use of recursion, i.e. a function that calls itself until a particular condition is met. Yet this seems to be a to complicated approach for your scenario.

If - for any reason - you are asked to not use such kind of loops, you could use a goto-statement (though this is clearly not the preferred way to do; goto-statements are very rarely used nowadays):

   int a;

loop:
   cout << "What's 2+2?";
   cin >> a;
   if (a==4) {cout << "Nice!";}
   else {
      cout << "WRONG! Try again!";
      goto loop;
   }
1
DontDoThis:
...
goto DontDoThis;   

That's it.

DontDoThis: is a "label", and goto DontDoThis jumps execution to the specified label. But, like the label's name says, DONT DO THIS! Using goto is concerned bad practice in modern coding, there are better ways to handle looping.

You should initialize a to 0 and then use a while (a != 4) loop. But that's not your question :)

0
0

The other loop statement is for

Another way is to use functions - they can be called repeatedly.

0

Well, if you don't want to use a while or do-while...

for (;;) //same as while(true)
{
    int a; 
    cout << "What's 2+2?";
    cin >> a;
    if (a==4) 
    {
        cout << "Nice!";
        break;
    }
    else 
    {
        cout << "WRONG! Try again!";
    }
}
2
  • 2
    I suppose you should somewhere introduce a break-statement. Aug 3, 2017 at 21:56
  • Sorry forgot about that somehow. Will fix it now @StephanLechner Aug 3, 2017 at 22:01

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.