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Why is the output 26 and not 25?
For the following code: int x = 1; For (; x < 6; x++) x *= x; System.out.println(x); Why is the output 26? When x = 4, the loop checks the condition and since it passes, then it increments x to 5. Then x is squared to 25 and when the condition is checked again, the condition fails, but for some reason, increments x by 1 immediately after the loop termination giving you 26. But yet if it was just a regular loop with x, then x would just stop at 6 and not increment x once the loop Condition fails. Can someone explain the reasoning and logic behind this?
9 Réponses
+ 14
x*=x (1)
x++ (2)
x*=x (4)
x++ (5)
x*=x (25)
x++ (26)
x<6 failed, loop terminated.
prints 26
There you go
+ 7
JoeyCentral You're welcome. Just remember that when a condition is satisfied, your code will be executed and then the variable will be incremented.
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After the body of the loop in a given iteration, the incrementing is done before the condition check.
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See when u enter the loop for first time initialization statement executes then condition is checked.......
After that it executes as....
Body>loop expression (like x++) >check condition>body
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Man 🌟Prometheus 🇸🇬 even mentioned values of x and I gave u the explanation... U think over it
+ 4
U are correct with ur explanation upto x=25...
After that for loop first increments x as x++......
Then it will check condition.... 26 < 6 it is False so loop is terminated
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but the increment isnt executed if the condition doesnt hold true. it only increments if the condition check is returned true, which is why x is incremented to 5 after 4 is checked when x = 4
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so why wouldnt x = 7 if that was the case and the loop was only incrementing x by 1 via the loop signature?
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🌟Prometheus 🇸🇬 thank you for the answer! that answers everything now!