Do while
Revision as of 22:37, 13 July 2013 by LepreKhaun Resident (talk | contribs) (Changed example so it now compiles.)
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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
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
Footnotes
- ^ The OpenSim LSL compiler will not do this implicitly. You will need to use an explicit check.