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Difference between revisions of "EDT:Writing statements"

(Continue)
Line 53: Line 53:
  
 
== Continue  ==
 
== Continue  ==
 +
 +
The EGL continue statement returns control to the start of a block of code controlled by a for, forEach, or while statement.
 +
 +
The following example assumes that you have coded a print function named printReport.
 +
 +
<source lang="java">
 +
for (i from 1 to 100 by 1)
 +
 +
  printReport(myList[i]);
 +
 
 +
  if ((i % 10) != 0)
 +
      continue;
 +
  end // if
 +
 
 +
  printReport(blankLine);
 +
end // for
 +
</source>
 +
 +
That code prints the members of a list, inserting a blank line between each group of ten.
  
 
== Exit  ==
 
== Exit  ==

Revision as of 14:06, 13 February 2012

EGL provides general statements such as if and while, as well as action statements for accessing data sources or invoking external logic.

General statements

The general statements are case, continue, exit, for, if, move, return, throw, try, use, and while.

Case

The case statement responds to conditions at run time by executing one set of statements rather than another:

  • You can test a criterion value. The following example invokes mySecondFunction:
function test()
   x Int = 3; 
 
   case (x)
      when (1)
         myFirstFunction();
      when (2, 3, 4)
         mySecondFunction();      
      otherwise
         myDefaultFunction();
   end   
end
  • You can test a set of logical expressions. The following example displays only "x passes":
function test()
   x Int = 3;
   y Int = 5;
   z Int = 7;
 
   case
      when (x == 3)
         SysLib.writeStdOut("x passes");
      when (y == 5)
         SysLib.writeStdOut("y passes");
      when (z == 7)
         SysLib.writeStdOut("z passes");
      otherwise
         SysLib.writeStdErr("You will not see this message.");
      end
   end 
end

As shown, no more than one clause ever executes. Control does not “fall through” from one clause to the next.


Continue

The EGL continue statement returns control to the start of a block of code controlled by a for, forEach, or while statement.

The following example assumes that you have coded a print function named printReport.

for (i from 1 to 100 by 1)
 
   printReport(myList[i]);
 
   if ((i % 10) != 0)
      continue;
   end // if
 
   printReport(blankLine);
end // for

That code prints the members of a list, inserting a blank line between each group of ten.

Exit


For


If


Move


Return


Throw


Try


Use


While


Action statements

The action statements are add, call, close, delete, execute, forEach, get, open, prepare, and transfer.

Add

Call

Close

Delete

Execute

ForEach

Get

Open

Prepare

Replace

Transfer

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