files/en-us/web/javascript/reference/statements/do...while/index.md
The do...while statement creates a loop that executes a specified statement as long as the test condition evaluates to true. The condition is evaluated after executing the statement, resulting in the specified statement executing at least once.
{{InteractiveExample("JavaScript Demo: do...while statement")}}
let result = "";
let i = 0;
do {
i += 1;
result += i;
} while (i < 5);
console.log(result);
// Expected output: "12345"
do
statement
while (condition);
statement
condition
statement is re-executed. When condition evaluates to false, execution continues with the statement after the do...while loop.Like other looping statements, you can use control flow statements inside statement:
statement execution and goes to the first statement after the loop.statement execution and re-evaluates condition.The do...while statement syntax requires a semicolon at the end, but the automatic semicolon insertion process may insert one for you if the lack of a semicolon results in invalid syntax.
In the following example, the do...while loop iterates at least once and
reiterates until i is no longer less than 5.
let result = "";
let i = 0;
do {
i += 1;
result += `${i} `;
} while (i > 0 && i < 5);
// Despite i === 0 this will still loop as it starts off without the test
console.log(result);
Because the statement is always executed once, do...while (false) is the same as executing the statement itself. This is a common idiom in C-like languages, which allows you to use break to break out of branching logic early.
do {
if (!user.loggedIn) {
console.log("You are not logged in");
break;
}
const friends = user.getFriends();
if (!friends.length) {
console.log("No friends found");
break;
}
for (const friend of friends) {
handleFriend(friend);
}
} while (false);
// The rest of code
In JavaScript, there are some alternatives, such as using a labeled block statement with break:
handleFriends: {
if (!user.loggedIn) {
console.log("You are not logged in");
break handleFriends;
}
const friends = user.getFriends();
if (!friends.length) {
console.log("No friends found");
break handleFriends;
}
for (const friend of friends) {
handleFriend(friend);
}
}
Or using a function:
function handleFriends() {
if (!user.loggedIn) {
console.log("You are not logged in");
return;
}
const friends = user.getFriends();
if (!friends.length) {
console.log("No friends found");
return;
}
for (const friend of friends) {
handleFriend(friend);
}
}
In some cases, it can make sense to use an assignment as a condition, such as this:
do {
// …
} while ((match = regexp.exec(str)));
But when you do, there are readability tradeoffs. The while documentation has a Using an assignment as a condition section with our recommendations.
{{Specifications}}
{{Compat}}