No. In more complicated expressions using a postfix operator instead of a prefix operator usually makes a difference, but not here.
for
Parts of a for
can be omitted.
Since the three parts of a for
are the three parts of any loop,
when a part is eliminated from a for
it has to be made up elsewhere.
Recall that the for
is equivalent to a while
:
for loop | <==> | while loop |
---|---|---|
for ( initialize ; test ; change ) loopBody ; |
. |
initialize; while ( test ) { loopBody; change } |
You can omit the initialize part from the for
loop.
It now acts the same as a while
loop
with its initialize part omitted.
Doing this is useful when initialization is complicated and you wish to
do it in several statements before the loop.
For example, initialization may depend on user input:
// get initial value of count from the user here for ( ; count < 13; count++ ) { System.out.println( "count is: " + count ); } System.out.println( "\nDone with the loop.\nCount is now" + count);
Here is a Javascript simulation of this: