120

I have a for loop over an array. What I want to do is test for a certain condition in the loop and skip to the next iteration if true:

For i = LBound(Schedule, 1) To UBound(Schedule, 1)
    If (Schedule(i, 1) < ReferenceDate) Then
        PrevCouponIndex = i
        Continue   '*** THIS LINE DOESN'T COMPILE, nor does "Next"
    End If
    DF = Application.Run("SomeFunction"....)
    PV = PV + (DF * Coupon / CouponFrequency)
Next

I Know I can do:

 If (Schedule(i, 1) < ReferenceDate) Then Continue For

but I want to be able to record the last value of i in the PrevCouponIndex variable.

Any ideas?

Thanks

4
  • 4
    You said: "I Know I can do: If (Schedule(i, 1) < ReferenceDate) Then Continue For" Are you sure about that? Continue is not a VBA keyword.
    – mwolfe02
    Dec 30, 2011 at 14:59
  • @mwolfe02 - no not sure, but saw in examples somewhere (cpearson?)
    – Richard H
    Dec 30, 2011 at 16:21
  • may have been a VB.NET example Aug 8, 2014 at 3:49
  • Continue is a VB keyword (in VS2017) but not for this, unfortunately. Probably saw an example in C# (or C++ or C).
    – Zeek2
    Nov 11, 2020 at 9:04

7 Answers 7

217

VBA does not have a Continue or any other equivalent keyword to immediately jump to the next loop iteration. I would suggest a judicious use of Goto as a workaround, especially if this is just a contrived example and your real code is more complicated:

For i = LBound(Schedule, 1) To UBound(Schedule, 1)
    If (Schedule(i, 1) < ReferenceDate) Then
        PrevCouponIndex = i
        Goto NextIteration
    End If
    DF = Application.Run("SomeFunction"....)
    PV = PV + (DF * Coupon / CouponFrequency)
    '....'
    'a whole bunch of other code you are not showing us'
    '....'
    NextIteration:
Next

If that is really all of your code, though, @Brian is absolutely correct. Just put an Else clause in your If statement and be done with it.

10
  • 21
    Thanks, that's a good tip re the GoTo (VBA - beaming you back to 1964)
    – Richard H
    Dec 30, 2011 at 16:23
  • 4
    GoTo is EVIL! Do not use GoTo or your code goes to hell! Seriously though, please do not use GoTo in your code.
    – George
    Feb 24, 2015 at 18:08
  • 9
    @George: GoTo can be abused (which is why I qualified my statement; see judicious), but it is not inherently evil. Seriously though, it is impossible to write robust VBA without the Goto statement simply because you need it for error handling (i.e., On Error Goto).
    – mwolfe02
    Feb 25, 2015 at 0:55
  • 6
    @George: What I'm recommending here is a workaround for another limitation of the language (no Continue statement). One can argue that the use of Continue in other languages should be avoided and therefore should be avoided here as well. In some ways, the link you posted makes my point. The link is to the GoTo statement in VB.Net. VB.Net has both structured error handling and Continue For/Continue Do statements. There is truly no need for GoTo in VB.Net; I suspect it was left in place largely to support easier conversion of existing VBA/VB6 code.
    – mwolfe02
    Feb 25, 2015 at 16:39
  • 7
    @George I've seen nesting that doesn't break code, but wrecks one's brain ;) Mar 3, 2015 at 17:40
43

You can use a kind of continue by using a nested Do ... Loop While False:

'This sample will output 1 and 3 only

Dim i As Integer

For i = 1 To 3: Do

    If i = 2 Then Exit Do 'Exit Do is the Continue

    Debug.Print i

Loop While False: Next i
8
  • 2
    interesting ..better than using goto!
    – ozmike
    Apr 18, 2018 at 0:58
  • 2
    This should be the answer Nov 20, 2018 at 21:04
  • 13
    Clever! I would hate to be the guy that comes across that with no comments though. lol
    – Caltor
    May 7, 2019 at 14:55
  • 9
    I agree that this solution has a certain cleverness, but disagree that it's elegant. It actually obscures the point of what's being accomplished, makes the coding much less self-evident, requiring commentary to explain it (as noted by Caltor).
    – pstraton
    Apr 16, 2020 at 23:09
  • 2
    This is very clever (though I don't necessarily mean that as a compliment...Don't Write Clever Code). This is the sort of nonsense you get when you treat good general advice ("Don't use GoTo in your code") as an inviolable rule never to be broken.
    – mwolfe02
    Jun 29, 2022 at 4:17
34

Couldn't you just do something simple like this?

For i = LBound(Schedule, 1) To UBound(Schedule, 1)
  If (Schedule(i, 1) < ReferenceDate) Then
     PrevCouponIndex = i
  Else
     DF = Application.Run("SomeFunction"....)
     PV = PV + (DF * Coupon / CouponFrequency)
  End If
Next
3
  • 4
    Indeed, is exactly what I have done :) But still it bugs me I have to wrap stuff in the Else piece. Thanks
    – Richard H
    Dec 30, 2011 at 16:22
  • 4
    +1 @RichardH well you have to use an IF for the test so this isn't that expensive codewise. You should though ensure that the most common outcome is that Schedule(i, 1) is less than ReferenceDate to avoid executing the Elsemore often than necessary. Otherwise use (ReferenceDate>=Schedule(i, 1)). (if the test is 50/50 then no need for optimisation)
    – brettdj
    Dec 31, 2011 at 1:17
  • 1
    Just might get a bit messy with numerous nested ifs... if for example you need to check quite a few Application.Match results within each iteration for not finding a matching before using the results. But so be it, there are worse things in life! Aug 26, 2018 at 0:43
15

Continue For isn't valid in VBA or VB6.

From this MSDN page it looks to have been introduced into VB.Net in VS 2005./Net 2.

As the others have said there's not really an option other than to use Goto or an Else.

5

Hi I am also facing this issue and I solve this using below example code

For j = 1 To MyTemplte.Sheets.Count

       If MyTemplte.Sheets(j).Visible = 0 Then
           GoTo DoNothing        
       End If 


'process for this for loop
DoNothing:

Next j 
2
  • Not sure why this had been down-voted and the next answer has over 100 up votes, and they are the same answer!
    – rryanp
    Oct 12, 2016 at 14:02
  • 5
    Probably because this answer was written 5 years after that answer, and is the exact same concept. Why should this receive upvotes? Apr 13, 2017 at 19:25
0

VB6 , VBA doesnt have continue. Following HACK is what I have been using since VB3 days ie year 1992. I have been using "for dummy = 1 to 1 : exit for : next dummy" loop. The "exit for" inside dummy inner loop implements continue for actual outer loop

Sub Print_all_integers_except_multiples_of_3()
  Dim i As Integer, dummy As Integer
  For i = 1 To 100
  For dummy = 1 To 1 ' dummy only to implement Continue For i
    If i Mod 3 = 0 Then Exit For ' implements Continue For i
    Debug.Print i
  Next dummy
  Next i
End Sub

So inner dummy loop has only one iteration. And Exit For statement inside the inner dummy loop will implement "Continue For". Also, I dont indent For Dummy loop. So it becomes easily visible that this dummy loop is "dummy". And sometimes, I use variable name "Continue1" instead of Dummy to make it more obvious.

-2

Maybe try putting it all in the end if and use a else to skip the code this will make it so that you are able not use the GoTo.

                        If 6 - ((Int_height(Int_Column - 1) - 1) + Int_direction(e, 1)) = 7 Or (Int_Column - 1) + Int_direction(e, 0) = -1 Or (Int_Column - 1) + Int_direction(e, 0) = 7 Then
                Else
                    If Grid((Int_Column - 1) + Int_direction(e, 0), 6 - ((Int_height(Int_Column - 1) - 1) + Int_direction(e, 1))) = "_" Then
                        Console.ReadLine()
                    End If
                End If

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