Kotlin – Break and Continue

In this guide, we will discuss Break and Continue in Kotlin.

Kotlin Break Statement

Kotlin break statement is used to come out of a loop once a certain condition is met. This loop could be a forwhile or do…while loop.

Syntax

Let’s check the syntax to terminate various types of loop to come out of them:

// Using break in for loop
for (...) {
   if(test){
      break
   } 
}

// Using break in while loop
while (condition) {
   if(test){
      break
   } 
}

// Using break in do...while loop
do {
   if(test){
      break
   } 
}while(condition)

If test expression is evaluated to true, break statment is executed which terminates the loop and program continues to execute just after the loop statment.

Example

Following is an example where the while loop terminates when counter variable i value becomes 3:

fun main(args: Array<String>) {
   var i = 0;
   while (i++ < 100) {
      println(i)
      if( i == 3 ){
         break
      }

   }
}

When you run the above Kotlin program, it will generate the following output:

1
2
3

Kotlin Labeled Break Statement

Kotlin label is the form of identifier followed by the @ sign, for example test@ or outer@. To make any Kotlin Expression as labeled one, we just need to put a label in front of the expression.

outerLoop@ for (i in 1..100) {
    // ...
}

Kotlin labeled break statement is used to terminate the specific loop. This is done by using break expression with @ sign followed by label name (break@LabelName).

fun main(args: Array<String>) {
    outerLoop@ for (i in 1..3) {  
        innerLoop@ for (j in 1..3) {  
            println("i = $i and j = $j")  
            if (i == 2){  
                break@outerLoop
            }  
        }  
    }  
}

When you run the above Kotlin program, it will generate the following output:

i = 1 and j = 1
i = 1 and j = 2
i = 1 and j = 3
i = 2 and j = 1

Kotlin Continue Statement

The Kotlin continue statement breaks the loop iteration in between (skips the part next to the continue statement till end of the loop) and continues with the next iteration in the loop.

Syntax

Let’s check the syntax to terminate various types of loop to come out of them:

// Using continue in for loop
for (...) {
   if(test){
      continue
   } 
}

// Using continue in while loop
while (condition) {
   if(test){
      continue
   } 
}

// Using continue in do...while loop
do {
   if(test){
      continue
   } 
}while(condition)

If test expression is evaluated to true, continue statment is executed which skips remaning part of the loop and jump to the next iteration of the loop statment.

Example

Following is an example where the while loop skips printing variable i when its value is 3:

fun main(args: Array<String>) {
   var i = 0;
   while (i++ < 6) {
      if( i == 3 ){
         continue
      }
      println(i)
   }
}

When you run the above Kotlin program, it will generate the following output:

1
2
4
5
6

Kotlin Labeled Continue Statement

Kotlin labeled continue statement is used to skip the part of a specific loop. This is done by using continue expression with @ sign followed by label name (continue@LabelName).

fun main(args: Array<String>) {
    outerLoop@ for (i in 1..3) {  
        innerLoop@ for (j in 1..3) {  
            if (i == 2){  
                continue@outerLoop
            }
            println("i = $i and j = $j")   
        }  
    }  
}

When you run the above Kotlin program, it will generate the following output:

i = 1 and j = 1
i = 1 and j = 2
i = 1 and j = 3
i = 3 and j = 1
i = 3 and j = 2
i = 3 and j = 3

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