Based on the answer of Tom Lokhorst, here is a variant to do either break
or continue
, based on a isExit
variable you set.
For that at the end of the outer (non-fake) loop, you add
if isExit then
exit repeat
end if
That way if isExit
is true, you simply exit the outer loop too, being an effective break
.
Original question/answer:
For the original question problem this would look like that, below will be a generalized one.
set aList to {"1", "2", "3", "4", "5"}
repeat with anItem in aList -- actual loop
set isExit to false
repeat 1 times -- fake loop
-- do your stuff
set value to item 1 of anItem
if value = "3" then
-- simulated `continue`
set isExit to false
exit repeat
end if
if value = "69" then
-- simulated `break`
set isExit to true
exit repeat
end if
display dialog value
end repeat
if isExit then
exit repeat
end if
end repeat
Generalized
So to break this down, into an more easy example:
Say you'd want to have either continue
or break
in those two if
s.
You can place all your code between those, I only included the code relevant for the different exit strategies.
If you want to write something like this:
repeat <condition_repeat>
if <condition_continue> then
continue
end if
if <condition_break> then
break
end if
end repeat
That could be written as
repeat <condition_repeat>
set isExit to false -- added
repeat 1 times -- added
if <condition_continue> then
set isExit to false -- changed
exit repeat -- changed
end if
if <condition_break> then
set isExit to true -- changed
exit repeat -- changed
end if
end repeat -- added
if isExit then -- added
exit repeat -- added
end if -- added
end repeat