Software: Apache. PHP/5.5.15 uname -a: Windows NT SVR-DMZ 6.1 build 7600 (Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise Edition) i586 SYSTEM Safe-mode: OFF (not secure) C:\Windows\SysWOW64\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\en-US\ drwxrwxrwx |
Viewing file: about_While.help.txt (2.31 KB) -rw-rw-rw- Select action/file-type: (+) | (+) | (+) | Code (+) | Session (+) | (+) | SDB (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | TOPIC about_While SHORT DESCRIPTION Describes a language statement that you can use to run a command block based on the results of a conditional test. LONG DESCRIPTION The While statement (also known as a While loop) is a language construct for creating a loop that runs commands in a command block as long as a conditional test evaluates to true. The While statement is easier to construct than a For statement because its syntax is less complicated. In addition, it is more flexible than the Foreach statement because you specify a conditional test in the While statement to control how many times the loop runs. The following shows the While statement syntax: while (<condition>){<statement list>} When you run a While statement, Windows PowerShell evaluates the <condition> section of the statement before entering the <statement list> section. The condition portion of the statement resolves to either true or false. As long as the condition remains true, Windows PowerShell reruns the <statement list> section. The <statement list> section of the statement contains one or more commands that are run each time the loop is entered or repeated. For example, the following While statement displays the numbers 1 through 3 if the $val variable has not been created or if the $val variable has been created and initialized to 0. while($val -ne 3) { $val++ Write-Host $val } In this example, the condition ($val is not equal to 3) is true while $val = 0, 1, 2. Each time through the loop, $val is incremented by 1 using the ++ unary increment operator ($val++). The last time through the loop, $val = 3. When $val equals 3, the condition statement evaluates to false, and the loop exits. To conveniently write this command at the Windows PowerShell command prompt, you can enter it in the following way: while($val -ne 3){$val++; Write-Host $val} Notice that the semicolon separates the first command that adds 1 to $val from the second command that writes the value of $val to the console. SEE ALSO about_Comparison_Operators about_Foreach about_For |
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