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Multiple conditions in a C 'for' loop

Tags:

c

for-loop

People also ask

Can you have multiple conditions in a for loop C?

Multiple variables can be initialized as well as multiple conditions, and propagations can be made in a single 'for' loop by just using a comma ','.

Can you put multiple conditions in a for loop?

It do says that only one condition is allowed in a for loop, however you can add multiple conditions in for loop by using logical operators to connect them.

Can a while loop have 3 conditions?

The above three conditons in while loop working as OR operator. If one of the three conditions meet, the while loop stops.

How do you write multiple conditions in a statement?

Here we'll study how can we check multiple conditions in a single if statement. This can be done by using 'and' or 'or' or BOTH in a single statement. and comparison = for this to work normally both conditions provided with should be true. If the first condition falls false, the compiler doesn't check the second one.


The comma operator evaluates all its operands and yields the value of the last one. So basically whichever condition you write first, it will be disregarded, and the second one will be significant only.

for (i = 0; j >= 0, i <= 5; i++)

is thus equivalent with

for (i = 0; i <= 5; i++)

which may or may not be what the author of the code intended, depending on his intents - I hope this is not production code, because if the programmer having written this wanted to express an AND relation between the conditions, then this is incorrect and the && operator should have been used instead.


Of course it is right what you say at the beginning, and C logical operator && and || are what you usually use to "connect" conditions (expressions that can be evaluated as true or false); the comma operator is not a logical operator and its use in that example makes no sense, as explained by other users. You can use it e.g. to "concatenate" statements in the for itself: you can initialize and update j altogether with i; or use the comma operator in other ways

#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)  // as std wants
{
  int i, j;

  // init both i and j; condition, we suppose && is the "original"
  // intention; update i and j
  for(i=0, j=2; j>=0 && i<=5; i++, j--)
  {
       printf("%d ", i+j);
  }
  return 0;        
}

The comma expression takes on the value of the last (eg. right-most) expression.

So in your first loop, the only controlling expression is i<=5; and j>=0 is ignored.

In the second loop, j>=0 controls the loop, and i<=5 is ignored.


As for a reason... there is no reason. This code is just wrong. The first part of the comma-expressions does nothing except confuse programmers. If a serious programmer wrote this, they should be ashamed of themselves and have their keyboard revoked.


Do not use this code; whoever wrote it clearly has a fundamental misunderstanding of the language and is not trustworthy. The expression:

j >= 0, i <= 5

evaluates "j >= 0", then throws it away and does nothing with it. Then it evaluates "i <= 5" and uses that, and only that, as the condition for ending the loop. The comma operator can be used meaningfully in a loop condition when the left operand has side effects; you'll often see things like:

for (i = 0, j = 0; i < 10; ++i, ++j) . . .

in which the comma is used to sneak in extra initialization and increment statements. But the code shown is not doing that, or anything else meaningful.


Wikipedia tells what comma operator does:

"In the C and C++ programming languages, the comma operator (represented by the token ,) is a binary operator that evaluates its first operand and discards the result, and then evaluates the second operand and returns this value (and type)."


There is an operator in C called the comma operator. It executes each expression in order and returns the value of the last statement. It's also a sequence point, meaning each expression is guaranteed to execute in completely and in order before the next expression in the series executes, similar to && or ||.