This section provides an overview of what loops is, and why a developer might want to use it.
It should also mention any large subjects within loops, and link out to the related topics. Since the Documentation for loops is new, you may need to create initial versions of those related topics.
A loop is a control flow structure to definitely or indefinitely run a set of statement written only once in code, until a certain condition is met or the process is terminated.
These loops are repeated based on the state of their conditions.
For loops are usually run upon a variable as the subject of iteration. For example, for loops can be run upon an integer to limit the number of times the loop should be run, or upon an array to iterate over it.
While loops is the most basic type of condition loop that keeps running until its condition is changed (or until a break
statement is executed).
A variant of while
loops is the do... while
loop. It is the same as while
loops, except that the content of the loop is run once before checking the condition.
Another variant is the until
/do... until
loops, which does the same as their counterparts in while
except that they check the condition in the opposite way -- while
loops run until the condition is false, and until
loops run until the condition is true.
These loops are repeated by iterating upon collections, such as arrays or iterables.
A forEach
loop runs on a collection by executing the code once per item in collection, giving the value and/or the key of the item as parameter.
goto
loops are a set of statement between a label and a goto statement.
In functional programming, recursive loops can be used to run a function recursively until a condition is met. This is a common cause for stack overflow errors.