enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Goto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goto

    Instead, Java implements labelled break and labelled continue statements. [30] According to the Java documentation, the use of gotos for multi-level breaks was the most common (90%) use of gotos in C. [ 31 ] Java was not the first language to take this approach—forbidding goto, but providing multi-level breaks— the BLISS programming ...

  3. Nested function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nested_function

    Nested functions can be used for unstructured control flow, by using the return statement for general unstructured control flow.This can be used for finer-grained control than is possible with other built-in features of the language – for example, it can allow early termination of a for loop if break is not available, or early termination of a nested for loop if a multi-level break or ...

  4. Go (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_(programming_language)

    [95]: 280–281 A function call prefixed with the go keyword starts a function in a new goroutine. The language specification does not specify how goroutines should be implemented, but current implementations multiplex a Go process's goroutines onto a smaller set of operating-system threads , similar to the scheduling performed in Erlang and ...

  5. Control flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_flow

    Sometimes within the body of a loop there is a desire to skip the remainder of the loop body and continue with the next iteration of the loop. Some languages provide a statement such as continue (most languages), skip, [8] cycle (Fortran), or next (Perl and Ruby), which will do this. The effect is to prematurely terminate the innermost loop ...

  6. Function overloading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_overloading

    Function overloading is usually associated with statically-typed programming languages that enforce type checking in function calls. An overloaded function is a set of different functions that are callable with the same name. For any particular call, the compiler determines which overloaded function to use and resolves this at compile time ...

  7. Closure (computer programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closure_(computer_programming)

    The term closure is often used as a synonym for anonymous function, though strictly, an anonymous function is a function literal without a name, while a closure is an instance of a function, a value, whose non-local variables have been bound either to values or to storage locations (depending on the language; see the lexical environment section below).

  8. For loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/For_loop

    The loop counter is used to decide when the loop should terminate and for the program flow to continue to the next instruction after the loop. A common identifier naming convention is for the loop counter to use the variable names i, j, and k (and so on if needed), where i would be the most outer loop, j the next inner loop, etc. The reverse ...

  9. Infinite loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_loop

    Thus the loop will always result in x = 2 and will never break. This could be fixed by moving the x = 1 instruction outside the loop so that its initial value is set only once. In some languages, programmer confusion about mathematical symbols may lead to an unintentional infinite loop. For example, here is a snippet in C: