In Kotlin, I cannot do a break
or continue
within a function loop and my lambda -- like I can from a normal for
loop. For example, this does not work:
(1..5).forEach { continue@forEach // not allowed, nor break@forEach }
There are old documentation that mentions this being available but it appears it was never implemented. What is the best way to get the same behavior when I want to continue
or break
from within the lambda?
Note: this question is intentionally written and answered by the author (Self-Answered Questions), so that the idiomatic answers to commonly asked Kotlin topics are present in SO. Also to clarify some really old answers written for alphas of Kotlin that are not accurate for current-day Kotlin.
Label in Kotlin starts with an identifier which is followed by @ . Here, test@ is a label marked at the outer while loop. Now, by using break with a label ( break@test in this case), you can break the specific loop.
How labeled continue works? Label in Kotlin starts with an identifier which is followed by @ . Here, outerloop@ is a label marked at outer while loop. Now, by using continue with the label ( continue@outerloop in this case), you can skip the execution of codes of the specific loop for that iteration.
To return values, we use the return keyword. In the example, we have two square functions. When a funcion has a body enclosed by curly brackets, it returns a value using the return keyword. The return keyword is not used for functions with expression bodies.
There are other options other than what you are asking for that provide similar functionality. For example:
You can avoid processing some values using filter
: (like a continue
)
dataSet.filter { it % 2 == 0 }.forEach { // do work on even numbers }
You can stop a functional loop by using takeWhile
: (like a break
)
dataSet.takeWhile { it < 10 }.forEach { // do work on numbers as long as they are < 10, otherwise stop }
A more complex, although nonsensical example where you want to do some processing, skip some resulting values, and then stop at a set of different conditions, would be:
dataSet.asSequence() .takeWhile { it >= 0 } // a -1 signals end of the dataset (break) .map { it + 1 } // increment each number .filterNot { it % 5 == 0 } // skip (continue) numbers divisible by 5 .map { it - 1 } // decrement each number by 1 .filter { it < 100 } // skip (continue) if number is >= 100 .drop(5) // ignore the first 5 numbers .take(10) // use the next 10 numbers and end .forEach { // do work on the final list }
A combination of these functions tends to eliminate the need for continue
or break
. And there are endless different options here and more than can be documented. To get an idea of what can be done, it is best if you learn all of the functions available in the Kotlin standard library for collections, lazy sequences, and iterable.
Sometimes there are cases where you have mutating state that still needs to break
or continue
and is hard to do in a functional model. You can make it work using more complex functions like fold
and reduce
combined with the filter
and takeWhile
functions but sometimes that is harder to grok. Therefore if you really want that exact behavior you can use return from lambda expression which mimics a continue
or break
depending on your usage.
Here is a an example mimicking continue
:
(1..5).forEach { if (it == 3) return@forEach // mimic continue@forEach // ... do something more }
And you can go more complicated and use labels when you having nesting or confusing situations:
(1..3).forEach outer@ { x -> (1..3).forEach inner@ { y -> if (x == 2 && y == 2) return@outer // mimic continue@outer if (x == 1 && y == 1) return@inner // mimic continue@inner // ... do something more } }
If you want to do a break
you need something outside the loop that you can return from, here we will use the run()
function to help us:
run breaker@ { (1..20).forEach { x -> if (x == 5) return@breaker // mimic break@forEach // ... do something more } }
Instead of run()
it could be let()
or apply()
or anything naturally you have surrounding the forEach
that is a place you want to break from. But you will also skip the code within the same block following the forEach
so be careful.
These are inlined functions so really they do not really add overhead.
Read the Kotlin reference docs for Returns and Jumps for all the special cases including for anonymous functions.
Here is a unit test proving this all works:
@Test fun testSo32540947() { val results = arrayListOf<Pair<Int,Int>>() (1..3).forEach outer@ { x -> (1..3).forEach inner@ { y -> if (x == 2 && y == 2) return@outer // continue @outer if (x == 1 && y == 1) return@inner // continue @inner results.add(Pair(x,y)) } } assertEquals(listOf(Pair(1,2), Pair(1,3), Pair(2,1), Pair(3,1), Pair(3,2), Pair(3,3)), results) val results2 = arrayListOf<Int>() run breaker@ { (1..20).forEach { x -> if (x == 5) return@breaker results2.add(x) } } assertEquals(listOf(1,2,3,4), results2) }
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With