Decision-making statements Contains Conditional,unconditional and repetitive statements
conditional statements
All blogs tagged with conditional statements
Showing 7 of 7 articles
In C, control statements are used to control the flow of program execution based on certain conditions or loops. These statements allow you to make decisions and repeat actions in your code
To check if a character is a vowel or a consonant in C, you can write a simple program that evaluates whether the character is one of the vowels (a, e, i, o, u) or not. Here's a basic example of how to do this:
The break statement is used to terminate the loop or statement in which it present. This statement is used to skip over the execution part of the loop on a certain condition.
In C# if-else statement also tests the condition. It executes the if block if the condition is true otherwise else block, is executed. the else statement to specify a block of code to be executed if the condition is False. the if-else statement checks a Boolean expression and executes the code based on if the expression is true or false. The if part of the code executes when the value of the expression is true. The else part of the code is executed when the value of the expression is false.
An unconditional statement in C is one that is executed without regard for whether a certain condition is true or false. Unconditional statements are processed sequentially, one after the other, and do not rely on any conditional logic.
A do-while loop is a sort of loop construct in C that repeatedly runs a block of code as long as a stated condition is true. The do-while loop, as opposed to the while loop, ensures that the code block is performed at least once, even if the condition is initially false. The basic syntax of a do-while loop in C is as follows: