For loops - Textbook Example
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I have the following code from a textbook exercise which asks me to arrive at the value of ires; the answer key has ires=25 as the answer. After struggling with the exercise, I think I have the logic down, but I need this additional clarification. It is my understanding that after MATLAB encounters the break statement, it stops the inner loop and goes to the next statement after the end of the inner loop; in this case, the "next statement" is ires=ires+1. My question is this: am I correct in assuming that once index2==6, ires=ires+1 doesn't run (ie. ires doesn't get incremented)?
ires=0;
for index1=1:10
for index2=index1:10
if index2==6
break;
end
ires=ires+1;
end
end
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Accepted Answer
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 3 Aug 2014
When the condition is met, Matlab will exist the loop, which means ires will not be incremented. All instructions after break, inside the for loop will be skiped
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More Answers (1)
Image Analyst
on 3 Aug 2014
Not correct. The "if" is not a loop so it doesn't start up with the ires line right after the if block. It breaks out of the index2 loop and continues on with the index1 loop (which may enter the index2 loop again if index1 is not 10).
3 Comments
Image Analyst
on 3 Aug 2014
Edited: Image Analyst
on 3 Aug 2014
Correct. Though index2 will never make it all the way to 10 because it will bail out once it gets to 6. So on the first loop ires will be 1,2,3,4,5, then on the next loop it will be incremented 4 times (for index2 = 2 through 5) and ires will be 6,7,8,9. Then the third outer iteration starts and so on.
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