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continue
StatementSimilar to break
, the continue
statement is used only inside
for
, while
, and do
loops. It skips
over the rest of the loop body, causing the next cycle around the loop
to begin immediately. Contrast this with break
, which jumps out
of the loop altogether.
The continue
statement in a for
loop directs awk
to
skip the rest of the body of the loop and resume execution with the
increment-expression of the for
statement. The following program
illustrates this fact:
BEGIN { for (x = 0; x <= 20; x++) { if (x == 5) continue printf "%d ", x } print "" }
This program prints all the numbers from 0 to 20—except for 5, for
which the printf
is skipped. Because the increment ‘x++’
is not skipped, x
does not remain stuck at 5. Contrast the
for
loop from the previous example with the following while
loop:
BEGIN { x = 0 while (x <= 20) { if (x == 5) continue printf "%d ", x x++ } print "" }
This program loops forever once x
reaches 5, because
the increment (‘x++’) is never reached.
The continue
statement has no special meaning with respect to the
switch
statement, nor does it have any meaning when used outside the
body of a loop. Historical versions of awk
treated a continue
statement outside a loop the same way they treated a break
statement outside a loop: as if it were a next
statement
(see Next Statement).
(d.c.)
Recent versions of BWK awk
no longer work this way, nor
does gawk
.
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