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Trail: Learning the Java Language
Lesson: Language Basics

The while and do-while Statements

You use a while(in the glossary) statement to continually execute a block of statements while a condition remains true. The general syntax of the while statement is:
while (expression) {
    statement
}
First, the while statement evaluates expression, which must return a boolean value. If the expression returns true, then the while statement executes the statement(s) associated with it. The while statement continues testing the expression and executing its block until the expression returns false.

The example program shown below, called WhileDemo(in a .java source file), uses a while statement to step through the characters of a string, appending each character from the string to the end of a string buffer until it encounters the letter g.

public class WhileDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        String copyFromMe = "Copy this string until you " + 
                            "encounter the letter 'g'.";
        StringBuffer copyToMe = new StringBuffer();

        int i = 0;
        char c = copyFromMe.charAt(i);

        while (c != 'g') {
            copyToMe.append(c);
            c = copyFromMe.charAt(++i);
        }
        System.out.println(copyToMe);
    }
}
The value printed by the last line is: Copy this strin.

The Java programming language provides another statement that is similar to the while statement--the do-while(in the glossary) statement. The general syntax of the do-while is:

do {
    statement(s)
} while (expression);
Instead of evaluating the expression at the top of the loop, do-while evaluates the expression at the bottom. Thus the statements associated with a do-while are executed at least once.

Here's the previous program rewritten to use do-while and renamed to DoWhileDemo(in a .java source file):

public class DoWhileDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        String copyFromMe = "Copy this string until you " +
                            "encounter the letter 'g'.";
        StringBuffer copyToMe = new StringBuffer();

        int i = 0;
        char c = copyFromMe.charAt(i);

        do {
            copyToMe.append(c);
            c = copyFromMe.charAt(++i);
        } while (c != 'g');
        System.out.println(copyToMe);
    }
}
The value printed by the last line is: Copy this strin.

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