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C++ How to Program, 10/e
book

C++ How to Program, 10/e

by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel
February 2016
Beginner
1080 pages
207h 57m
English
Pearson
Content preview from C++ How to Program, 10/e

4.4 Control Structures

Normally, statements in a program are executed one after the other in the order in which they’re written. This process is called sequential execution. Various C++ statements, which we’ll soon discuss, enable you to specify that the next statement to execute is not necessarily the next one in sequence. This is called transfer of control.

During the 1960s, it became clear that the indiscriminate use of transfers of control was the root of much difficulty experienced by software development groups. The blame was pointed at the goto statement (used in most programming languages of the time), which allows you to specify a transfer of control to one of a wide range of destinations in a program.

The research of Bohm and Jacopini ...

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