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continue

continue 在循环结构用用来跳过本次循环中剩余的代码并在条件求值为真时开始执行下一次循环。

Note: 注意在 PHP 中 switch 语句被认为是可以使用 continue 的一种循环结构。

continue 接受一个可选的数字参数来决定跳过几重循环到循环结尾。

<?php
while (list ($key$value) = each($arr)) {
    if (!(
$key 2)) { // skip odd members
        
continue;
    }
    
do_something_odd($value);
}

$i 0;
while (
$i++ < 5) {
    echo 
"Outer<br />\n";
    while (
1) {
        echo 
"&nbsp;&nbsp;Middle<br />\n";
        while (
1) {
            echo 
"&nbsp;&nbsp;Inner<br />\n";
            continue 
3;
        }
        echo 
"This never gets output.<br />\n";
    }
    echo 
"Neither does this.<br />\n";
}
?>

省略 continue 后面的分号会导致混淆。以下例子示意了不应该这样做。

<?php
  
for ($i 0$i 5; ++$i) {
      if (
$i == 2)
          continue
      print 
"$i\n";
  }
?>

希望得到的结果是:

0
1
3
4

可实际的输出是:

2

因为 print() 调用的返回值是 int(1),看上去作为了上述可选的数字参数。


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用户评论:

Anonymous (25-Jul-2011 05:22)

<?php
function print_primes_between($x,$y)
{
    for(
$i=$x;$i<=$y;$i++)
   {
        for(
$j= 2; $j < $i; $j++)  if($i%$j==0) continue 2;
        echo
$i.",";
   }
}
?>

This function, using continue syntax, is to print prime numbers between given numbers, x and y.
For example, print_primes_between(10,20) will output:

11,13,17,19,23,29,

skippychalmers at gmail dot com (17-May-2011 01:56)

To state the obvious, it should be noted, that the optional param defaults to 1 (effectively).

rjsteinert.com (27-Feb-2011 05:22)

The most basic example that print "13", skipping over 2.

<?php
$arr
= array(1, 2, 3);
foreach(
$arr as $number) {
  if(
$number == 2) {
    continue;
  }
  print
$number;
}
?>

jaimthorn at yahoo dot com (24-Mar-2010 02:36)

The remark "in PHP the switch statement is considered a looping structure for the purposes of continue" near the top of this page threw me off, so I experimented a little using the following code to figure out what the exact semantics of continue inside a switch is:

<?php

   
for( $i = 0; $i < 3; ++ $i )
    {
        echo
' [', $i, '] ';
        switch(
$i )
        {
            case
0: echo 'zero'; break;
            case
1: echo 'one' ; XXXX;
            case
2: echo 'two' ; break;
        }
        echo
' <' , $i, '> ';
    }

?>

For XXXX I filled in

- continue 1
- continue 2
- break 1
- break 2

and observed the different results.  This made me come up with the following one-liner that describes the difference between break and continue:

continue resumes execution just before the closing curly bracket ( } ), and break resumes execution just after the closing curly bracket.

Corollary: since a switch is not (really) a looping structure, resuming execution just before a switch's closing curly bracket has the same effect as using a break statement.  In the case of (for, while, do-while) loops, resuming execution just prior their closing curly brackets means that a new iteration is started --which is of course very unlike the behavior of a break statement.

In the one-liner above I ignored the existence of parameters to break/continue, but the one-liner is also valid when parameters are supplied.

Anonymous (12-Jan-2010 11:08)

Example regarding the condition at the end of the loop and continue:
<?php
$i
= 0;
do {
   
printf('%d ', $i);
    continue;
} while( ++
$i < 10);

// Output: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
?>
It gets executed all the time regardless that continue is placed before the while() statement. That does not get skipped.

Nikolay Ermolenko (16-Apr-2009 01:58)

Using continue and break:

<?php
$stack
= array('first', 'second', 'third', 'fourth', 'fifth');

foreach(
$stack AS $v){
    if(
$v == 'second')continue;
    if(
$v == 'fourth')break;
    echo
$v.'<br>';
}
/*

first
third

*/

$stack2 = array('one'=>'first', 'two'=>'second', 'three'=>'third', 'four'=>'fourth', 'five'=>'fifth');
foreach(
$stack2 AS $k=>$v){
    if(
$v == 'second')continue;
    if(
$k == 'three')continue;
    if(
$v == 'fifth')break;
    echo
$k.' ::: '.$v.'<br>';
}
/*

one ::: first
four ::: fourth

*/

?>

Anonymous (12-Sep-2008 06:04)

The continue keyword can skip division by zero:
<?php
$i
= 100;
while (
$i > -100)
{
   
$i--;
    if (
$i == 0)
    {
        continue;
    }
    echo (
200 / $i) . "<br />";
}
?>

Geekman (28-Dec-2007 01:01)

For clarification, here are some examples of continue used in a while/do-while loop, showing that it has no effect on the conditional evaluation element.

<?php
// Outputs "1 ".
$i = 0;
while (
$i == 0) {
   
$i++;
    echo
"$i ";
    if (
$i == 1) continue;
}

// Outputs "1 2 ".
$i = 0;
do {
   
$i++;
    echo
"$i ";
    if (
$i == 2) continue;
} while (
$i == 1);
?>

Both code snippets would behave exactly the same without continue.

tufan dot oezduman at gmail dot com (21-Dec-2006 12:28)

a possible explanation for the behavior of continue in included scripts mentioned by greg and dedlfix above may be the following line of the "return" documentation: "If the current script file was include()ed or require()ed, then control is passed back to the calling file."
The example of greg produces an error since page2.php does not contain any loop-operations.

So the only way to give the control back to the loop-operation  in page1.php would be a return.

szrrya at yahoo dot com (17-Jul-2006 10:18)

Documentation states:

"continue is used within looping structures to skip the rest of the current loop iteration"

Current functionality treats switch structures as looping in regards to continue.  It has the same effect as break.

The following code is an example:

<?php
for ($i1 = 0; $i1 < 2; $i1++) {
 
// Loop 1.
 
for ($i2 = 0; $i2 < 2; $i2++) {
   
// Loop 2.
   
switch ($i2 % 2) {
      case
0:
        continue;
        break;
    }
    print
'[' . $i2 . ']<br>';
  }
  print
$i1 . '<br>';
}
?>

This outputs the following:
[0]
[1]
0
[0]
[1]
1

Switch is documented as a block of if...elseif... statements, so you might expect the following output:
[1]
0
[1]
1

This output requires you to either change the switch to an if or use the numerical argument and treat the switch as one loop.

Rene (18-Feb-2006 08:24)

(only) the reason that is given on the "Continue with missing semikolon" example is wrong.

the script will output "2" because the missing semikolon causes that the "print"-call is executed only if the "if" statement is true. It has nothing to to with "what" the "print"-call would return or not return, but the returning value can cause to skip to the end of higher level Loops if any call is used that will return a bigger number than 1.

<?php
continue print "$i\n";
?>

because of the optional argument, the script will not run into a "unexpected T_PRINT" error. It will not run into an error, too, if the call after continue does return anything but a number.

i suggest to change it from:
because the return value of the print() call is int(1), and it will look like the optional numeric argument mentioned above.

to
because the print() call will look like the optional numeric argument mentioned above.

net_navard at yahoo dot com (25-Dec-2005 05:01)

Hello firends

It is said in manually:
continue also accepts an optional numeric argument which tells it how many levels of enclosing loops it should .

In order to understand better this,An example for that:
<?php

/*continue also accepts an optional numeric argument which
    tells it how many levels of enclosing loops it should skip.*/

for($k=0;$k<2;$k++)
{
//First loop

   
   
for($j=0;$j<2;$j++)
    {
//Second loop

     
for($i=0;$i<4;$i++)
      {
//Third loop
   
if($i>2)
    continue
2;// If $i >2 ,Then it skips to the Second loop(level 2),And starts the next step,
   
echo "$i\n";
       }

    }

}

?>

Merry's christmas :)
   
With regards,Hossein

dedlfix gives me a hint (28-Jan-2005 02:47)

a possible solution for
greg AT laundrymat.tv

I've got the same problem as Greg
and now it works very fine by using
return() instead of continue.

It seems, that you have to use return()
if you have a file included and
you want to continue with the next loop

greg AT laundrymat.tv (14-Jan-2005 04:58)

You using continue in a file included in a loop will produce an error.  For example:

//page1.php
for($x=0;$x<10;$x++)
   {
    include('page2.php');   
}

//page2.php

if($x==5)
    continue;
else
   print $x;

it should print

"012346789" no five, but it produces an error:

Cannot break/continue 1 level in etc.

www.derosetechnologies.com (11-May-2004 04:58)

In the same way that one can append a number to the end of a break statement to indicate the "loop" level upon which one wishes to 'break' , one can append a number to the end of a 'continue' statement to acheive the same goal. Here's a quick example:

<?
    for ($i = 0;$i<3;$i++) {
        echo "Start Of I loop\n";
        for ($j=0;;$j++) {
           
            if ($j >= 2) continue 2; // This "continue" applies to the "$i" loop
            echo "I : $i J : $j"."\n";
        }
        echo "End\n";
    }
?>

The output here is:
Start Of I loop
I : 0 J : 0
I : 0 J : 1
Start Of I loop
I : 1 J : 0
I : 1 J : 1
Start Of I loop
I : 2 J : 0
I : 2 J : 1

For more information, see the php manual's entry for the 'break' statement.