Difference between revisions of "Do while"

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m (Undo revision 1174295. Clarify examples.)
m (Changed example so it now compiles.)
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         integer olf;  // Without applied value an integer will be defaulted to zero.
         integer olf;  // Without applied value an integer will be defaulted to zero.
         do
         do
             llSay(0, (string) ++olf);      // Increment before the while condition  
             llSay(0, (string) (++olf));      // Increment before the while condition  
         while (olf < 5);                    // On the first pass/loop olf = 1
         while (olf < 5);                    // On the first pass/loop olf = 1
     }
     }

Revision as of 22:37, 13 July 2013

do loop while (condition);

•  loop Executes once, then executes condition.
•  condition If condition executes true, it then loops back and executes loop again.


Any of the statements can be null statements. A do...while loop is slightly faster than a while or for loop, and requires fewer bytes of memory than a while or for loop. (However, the speed increase and byte difference does not apply to scripts compiled in Mono)

Specification

Conditional Types
Type Condition
integer True if it is not zero.
float True if it is not zero.[1]
string True if its length is not zero.
key True only if it is a valid key and not NULL_KEY.
vector True if the vector is not ZERO_VECTOR.
rotation True if the rotation is not ZERO_ROTATION.
list True if the length is not zero. Note that correct behavior is only seen with Mono-compiled scripts; LSO-compiled scripts incorrectly resolve to false if the list is non-empty: BUG-230728

Examples

<lsl>//Counts from 1 to 5 default {

   state_entry()
   {
       integer olf;   // Without applied value an integer will be defaulted to zero.
       do
           llSay(0, (string) (++olf));       // Increment before the while condition 
       while (olf < 5);                    // On the first pass/loop olf = 1
   }

}</lsl><lsl>//Counts from 0 to 4 default {

   state_entry()
   {
       integer olf;
       do
           llSay(0, (string)olf);    // olf is still equal to zero at first iteration
       while (++olf < 5);            // Increments then does the while-test
   }

}</lsl><lsl>//Counts from 0 to 4 and comments as it loops (block statement demo) default {

   state_entry()
   {
       integer olf;
       do
       {   // Curly brackets are required since there is more than one statement within the do-loop
           llSay(0, (string)olf);    
           llSay(0, "looping");
       }
       while (++olf < 5);
   }

}</lsl><lsl> //Practical example of where a do/while loop is more immediately useful than a while loop: //Note that a sensor event always contains input data, so the 'do' always has something to process

   sensor(integer num)
   {   
       if (num > 12)
           num = 12;
       do
       {   
           // --num decrements num before using it to pick up a detected avatar's name. Thus we retrieve #11 through #0
           gNameList += [llGetSubString(llDetectedName(--num), 0, 23)];    //sometimes avatar names are too long for dialog display
           gKeyList  += [llDetectedKey(num)];    //we will dialog select avatar by name, but still need their key
                                                 //even if their name has not been truncated above
       }  while (num > 0);
       llDialog(llGetOwner(), "Choose an avatar.", gNameList, gDlgChan);  //channel is pre-defined when llSensor is triggered
   }

</lsl>

Deep Notes

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Footnotes

  1. ^ The OpenSim LSL compiler will not do this implicitly. You will need to use an explicit check.