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Trail: Learning the Java Language
Lesson: Language Basics

Control Flow Statements

When you write a program, you type statements into a file. Without control flow statements, the interpreter executes these statements in the order they appear in the file from left to right, top to bottom. You can use control flow statements in your programs to conditionally execute statements, to repeatedly execute a block of statements, and to otherwise change the normal, sequential flow of control. For example, in the following code snippet, the if statement conditionally executes the System.out.println statement within the braces, based on the return value of Character.isUpperCase(aChar):
char c;
...
if (Character.isUpperCase(aChar)) {
    System.out.println("The character " + aChar + " is upper case.");
}
The Java programming language provides several control flow statements, which are listed in the following table.

Statement Type Keyword
looping while, do-while , for
decision making if-else, switch-case
exception handling try-catch-finally, throw
branching break, continue, label:, return

In the sections that follow, you will see the following notation to describe the general form of a control flow statement:

control flow statement details {
    statement(s)
}
Technically, the braces, { and }, are not required if the block contains only one statement. However, we recommend that you always use { and }, because the code is easier to read and it helps to prevent errors when modifying code.


Note : Although goto is a reserved word, currently the Java programming language does not support the goto statement.

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