The do statement
A do statement repeatedly runs a statement until the test
expression evaluates to false (or 0 in
C). Because of the order of processing, the statement is run at least
once.
The expression must
be of arithmetic or pointer type.
The controlling expression must
be convertible to type bool.
The body of the loop is run before the controlling while clause
is evaluated. Further processing of the do statement
depends on the value of the while clause. If the while clause
does not evaluate to false, the statement runs again.
When the while clause evaluates to false,
the statement ends.
A break, return, or goto statement
can cause the processing of a do statement to end,
even when the while clause does not evaluate to false.
A throw expression
also can cause a do statement to end prior to the
condition being evaluated.
i while i is
less than 5: #include <stdio.h>
int main(void) {
int i = 0;
do {
i++;
printf("Value of i: %d\n", i);
}
while (i < 5);
return 0;
}The following is the output of the above example: Value of i: 1
Value of i: 2
Value of i: 3
Value of i: 4
Value of i: 5