Home Page
>
Learning the Java Language
>
Language Basics
Summary of Control Flow Statements
The if-then
statement is the most basic of
all the control flow statements. It tells your program to execute a certain
section of code only if a particular test evaluates to true
.
The if-then-else
statement provides a secondary path of execution when an
"if" clause evaluates to false
.
Unlike if-then
and if-then-else
, the switch
statement allows for any number of
possible execution paths.
The while
and do-while
statements continually execute a block of statements
while a particular condition is true
.
The difference between do-while
and while
is
that do-while
evaluates its expression at the bottom of the loop
instead of the top.
Therefore, the statements within the do
block are always executed
at least once.
The for
statement provides a compact way to iterate over a range of
values. It has two forms, one of which was designed for looping through
collections
and arrays.