continue

suggest change

In addition to break, there is also the keyword continue. Instead of breaking completely the loop, it will simply skip the current iteration. It could be useful if you don’t want some code to be executed if a particular value is set.

Here’s a simple example:

for (int i = 1; i <= 10; i++)
{
    if (i < 9)
        continue;

    Console.WriteLine(i);
}

Will result in:

9
10

Note: Continue is often most useful in while or do-while loops. For-loops, with well-defined exit conditions, may not benefit as much.

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Looping:
* break
* continue

Table Of Contents
17 Regex
19 Arrays
21 Enum
22 Tuples
24 GUID
27 Looping
36 Casting
46 Methods
88 Events
92 Structs
104 Indexer
106 Stream
107 Timers
109 Threading
127 Caching
135 Pointers
147 C# Script