While...End While Statement (Visual Basic)
Runs a series of statements as long as a given condition is True.
While condition
[ statements ]
[ Continue While ]
[ statements ]
[ Exit While ]
[ statements ]
End While
Parts
Term |
Definition |
condition |
Required. Boolean expression. If condition is Nothing, Visual Basic treats it as False. |
statements |
Optional. One or more statements following While, which run every time condition is True. |
Continue While |
Optional. Transfers control to the next iteration of the While block. |
Exit While |
Optional. Transfers control out of the While block. |
End While |
Required. Terminates the definition of the While block. |
Remarks
Use a While...End While structure when you want to repeat a set of statements an indefinite number of times, as long as a condition remains True. If you want more flexibility with where you test the condition or what result you test it for, you might prefer the Do...Loop Statement (Visual Basic). If you want to repeat the statements a set number of times, the For...Next Statement (Visual Basic) is usually a better choice.
Note
The While keyword is also used in the Do...Loop Statement (Visual Basic), the Skip While Clause (Visual Basic) and the Take While Clause (Visual Basic).
If condition is True, all of the statements run until the End While statement is encountered. Control then returns to the While statement, and condition is again checked. If condition is still True, the process is repeated. If it’s False, control passes to the statement that follows the End While statement.
The While statement always checks the condition before it starts the loop. Looping continues while the condition remains True. If condition is False when you first enter the loop, it doesn’t run even once.
The condition usually results from a comparison of two values, but it can be any expression that evaluates to a Boolean Data Type (Visual Basic) value (True or False). This expression can include a value of another data type, such as a numeric type, that has been converted to Boolean.
You can nest While loops by placing one loop within another. You can also nest different kinds of control structures within one another. For more information, see Nested Control Structures (Visual Basic).
Exit While
The Exit While statement can provide another way to exit a While loop. Exit While immediately transfers control to the statement that follows the End While statement.
You typically use Exit While after some condition is evaluated (for example, in an If...Then...Else structure). You might want to exit a loop if you detect a condition that makes it unnecessary or impossible to continue iterating, such as an erroneous value or a termination request. You can use Exit While when you test for a condition that could cause an endless loop, which is a loop that could run an extremely large or even infinite number of times. You can then use Exit While to escape the loop.
You can place any number of Exit While statements anywhere in the While loop.
When used within nested While loops, Exit While transfers control out of the innermost loop and into the next higher level of nesting.
The Continue While statement immediately transfers control to the next iteration of the loop. For more information, see Continue Statement (Visual Basic).
Example
In the following example, the statements in the loop continue to run until the index variable is greater than 10.
Dim index As Integer = 0
While index <= 10
Debug.Write(index.ToString & " ")
index += 1
End While
Debug.WriteLine("")
' Output: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
The following example illustrates the use of the Continue While and Exit While statements.
Dim index As Integer = 0
While index < 100000
index += 1
' If index is between 5 and 7, continue
' with the next iteration.
If index >= 5 And index <= 8 Then
Continue While
End If
' Display the index.
Debug.Write(index.ToString & " ")
' If index is 10, exit the loop.
If index = 10 Then
Exit While
End If
End While
Debug.WriteLine("")
' Output: 1 2 3 4 9 10
The following example reads all lines in a text file. The OpenText method opens the file and returns a StreamReader that reads the characters. In the While condition, the Peek method of the StreamReader determines whether the file contains additional characters.
Private Sub ShowText(ByVal textFilePath As String)
If System.IO.File.Exists(textFilePath) = False Then
Debug.WriteLine("File Not Found: " & textFilePath)
Else
Dim sr As System.IO.StreamReader = System.IO.File.OpenText(textFilePath)
While sr.Peek() >= 0
Debug.WriteLine(sr.ReadLine())
End While
sr.Close()
End If
End Sub
See Also
Reference
Do...Loop Statement (Visual Basic)
For...Next Statement (Visual Basic)
Boolean Data Type (Visual Basic)
Continue Statement (Visual Basic)