Difference between revisions of "Basic Pascal Tutorial/Chapter 3/FOR..DO"

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The index variable must be of an '''ordinal''' data type. You can use the index in calculations within the body of the loop, but you should not change the value of the index. An example of using the index is:
+
The index variable must be of an '''ordinal''' data. You can use the index in calculations within the body of the loop, but you cannot not change the value of the index.
 +
In Pascal, the <tt>for</tt> loop can only count in increments (steps) of 1.
 +
A loop can be interrupted using the ''break'' statement.
 +
An example of using the index is:
 
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sum := 0;
 
sum := 0;
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end;
 
end;
 
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Index variable cannot be changed during iterations.
 
A loop can be interrupted using the ''break'' statement.
 
  
 
The computer would do the sum the long way and still finish it in far less time than it took the mathematician Gauss to do the sum the short way (<tt>1+100 = 101. 2+99 = 101</tt>. See a pattern? There are 100 numbers, so the pattern repeats 50 times. <tt>101*50 = 5050</tt>. This isn't advanced mathematics, its attribution to Gauss is probably apocryphal.).
 
The computer would do the sum the long way and still finish it in far less time than it took the mathematician Gauss to do the sum the short way (<tt>1+100 = 101. 2+99 = 101</tt>. See a pattern? There are 100 numbers, so the pattern repeats 50 times. <tt>101*50 = 5050</tt>. This isn't advanced mathematics, its attribution to Gauss is probably apocryphal.).
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   statement;
 
   statement;
 
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In Pascal, the <tt>for</tt> loop can only count in increments (steps) of 1.
 
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 08:52, 20 October 2014

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FOR...DO Loops

Looping means repeating a statement or compound statement over and over until some condition is met.

There are three types of loops:

  • fixed repetition - only repeats a fixed number of times
  • pretest - tests a Boolean expression, then goes into the loop if TRUE
  • posttest - executes the loop, then tests the Boolean expression

In Pascal, the fixed repetition loop is the for loop. The general form is:

for index := StartingLow to EndingHigh do
  statement;

The index variable must be of an ordinal data. You can use the index in calculations within the body of the loop, but you cannot not change the value of the index. In Pascal, the for loop can only count in increments (steps) of 1. A loop can be interrupted using the break statement. An example of using the index is:

sum := 0;
for count := 1 to 100 do
begin
  sum := sum + count;
  if sub= 38 then break;
end;

The computer would do the sum the long way and still finish it in far less time than it took the mathematician Gauss to do the sum the short way (1+100 = 101. 2+99 = 101. See a pattern? There are 100 numbers, so the pattern repeats 50 times. 101*50 = 5050. This isn't advanced mathematics, its attribution to Gauss is probably apocryphal.).

In the for-to-do loop, the starting value MUST be lower than the ending value, or the loop will never execute! If you want to count down, you should use the for-downto-do loop:

for index := StartingHigh downto EndingLow do
  statement;

See also

While ...Do loops

Repeat... Until loops

For... in loops


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