while statement continually executes a block of statements
while a particular condition is true.
Its syntax can be expressed as:
while (expression) {
statement(s)
}
while statement evaluates expression, which must return a
boolean value. If the expression evaluates to true, the while
statement executes the statement(s) in the while block. The while
statement continues testing the expression and executing its block until the expression
evaluates to false. Using the while statement to print the values
from 1 through 10 can be accomplished as in the following
WhileDemo
program:
class WhileDemo {
public static void main(String[] args){
int count = 1;
while (count < 11) {
System.out.println("Count is: " + count);
count++;
}
}
}
You can implement an infinite loop using the while statement
as follows:
while (true){
// your code goes here
}
The Java programming language also provides a do-while
statement, which can be expressed as follows:
do {
statement(s)
} while (expression);
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, as shown in the following
DoWhileDemo
program:
class DoWhileDemo {
public static void main(String[] args){
int count = 1;
do {
System.out.println("Count is: " + count);
count++;
} while (count <= 11);
}
}