The do-while Loop
As we saw
earlier, a while statement allows the
interpreter to execute a block of code repeatedly while a specified
condition remains true. Due to a
while loop’s structure, its body will be
skipped entirely if the loop’s condition is not met the first
time it is tested. A do-while statement lets us
guarantee that a loop body will be executed at least once with
minimal fuss. The body of a do-while loop
always executes the first time through the loop.
The do-while statement’s syntax is
somewhat like an inverted while statement:
do {
substatements
} while (condition);The keyword do begins the loop, followed by the
substatements of the body. On the
interpreter’s first pass through the
do-while statement,
substatements are executed before
condition is ever checked. At the end of
the substatements block, if
condition is true, the
loop is begun anew and substatements are
executed again. The loop executes repeatedly until
condition is false, at
which point the do-while statement ends. Note
that a semicolon is required following the parentheses that contain
the condition.
Obviously, do-while is handy when we want to
perform a task at least once and perhaps subsequent times. In Example 8.2 we duplicate a series of twinkling-star movie
clips from a clip called starParent and place them
randomly on the Stage. Our galaxy will always contain at least one
star, even if numStars is set to 0.
Example 8-2. Using a do-while Loop
var numStars = 5;
var i = 1;
do {
// Duplicate the starParent ...Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
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