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7.4.4 The for
Statement
The for
statement makes it more convenient to count iterations of a
loop. The general form of the for
statement looks like this:
for (initialization; condition; increment) body |
The initialization, condition, and increment parts are
arbitrary awk
expressions, and body stands for any
awk
statement.
The for
statement starts by executing initialization.
Then, as long
as the condition is true, it repeatedly executes body and then
increment. Typically, initialization sets a variable to
either zero or one, increment adds one to it, and condition
compares it against the desired number of iterations.
For example:
awk '{ for (i = 1; i <= 3; i++) print $i }' inventory-shipped |
This prints the first three fields of each input record, with one field per line.
It isn’t possible to
set more than one variable in the
initialization part without using a multiple assignment statement
such as ‘x = y = 0’. This makes sense only if all the initial values
are equal. (But it is possible to initialize additional variables by writing
their assignments as separate statements preceding the for
loop.)
The same is true of the increment part. Incrementing additional
variables requires separate statements at the end of the loop.
The C compound expression, using C’s comma operator, is useful in
this context but it is not supported in awk
.
Most often, increment is an increment expression, as in the previous example. But this is not required; it can be any expression whatsoever. For example, the following statement prints all the powers of two between 1 and 100:
for (i = 1; i <= 100; i *= 2) print i |
If there is nothing to be done, any of the three expressions in the
parentheses following the for
keyword may be omitted. Thus,
‘for (; x > 0;)’ is equivalent to ‘while (x > 0)’. If the
condition is omitted, it is treated as true, effectively
yielding an infinite loop (i.e., a loop that never terminates).
In most cases, a for
loop is an abbreviation for a while
loop, as shown here:
initialization while (condition) { body increment } |
The only exception is when the continue
statement
(see section The continue
Statement) is used
inside the loop. Changing a for
statement to a while
statement in this way can change the effect of the continue
statement inside the loop.
The awk
language has a for
statement in addition to a
while
statement because a for
loop is often both less work to
type and more natural to think of. Counting the number of iterations is
very common in loops. It can be easier to think of this counting as part
of looping rather than as something to do inside the loop.
There is an alternate version of the for
loop, for iterating over
all the indices of an array:
for (i in array) do something with array[i] |
See section Scanning All Elements of an Array,
for more information on this version of the for
loop.
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