Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-915A89D4-7F0F-40E8-8594-55B303AC4DF6
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-915A89D4-7F0F-40E8-8594-55B303AC4DF6
DO WHILE
Statement: Executes the range of a DO construct while a specified condition remains true.
[name:] DO [label[, ]] WHILE (expr)
block
[END DO [name]]
name |
(Optional) Is the name of the DO WHILE construct. |
label |
(Optional) Is a label specifying an executable statement in the same program unit. |
expr |
Is a scalar logical (test) expression enclosed in parentheses. |
block |
Is a sequence of zero or more statements or constructs that make up the DO range. |
If a construct name is specified in a DO WHILE statement, the same name must appear in a terminal END DO statement. If no construct name is specified in the DO WHILE statement, no name can appear in the terminal END DO statement, if one is specified.
Before each execution of the DO range, the logical expression is evaluated. If it is true, the statements in the body of the loop are executed. If it is false, the DO construct terminates and control transfers to the statement following the loop.
If END DO is specified, it terminates the construct. If END DO is not specified, when all of the iterations have completed execution, the loop terminates, and the DO construct becomes inactive.
If no label appears in a DO WHILE statement, the DO WHILE loop must be terminated with an END DO statement. See the description of the DO statement for the semantics of labeled and block forms of DO loops.
You can transfer control out of a DO WHILE loop but not into a loop from elsewhere in the program.
Terminating a DO WHILE loop with an executable statement other than a DO WHILE or a CONTINUE statement is a deleted feature in the Fortran Standard. Intel® Fortran fully supports features deleted in the Fortran Standard.
The labeled form of a DO WHILE loop is an obsolescent feature in the Fortran Standard.
The following example shows a DO WHILE statement:
CHARACTER*132 LINE
...
I = 1
DO WHILE (LINE(I:I) .EQ. ' ')
I = I + 1
END DO
The following examples show required and optional END DO statements:
Required Optional
DO WHILE (I .GT. J) DO 10 WHILE (I .GT. J)
ARRAY(I,J) = 1.0 ARRAY(I,J) = 1.0
I = I - 1 I = I - 1
END DO 10 END DO
The following shows another example:
CHARACTER(1) input
input = ' '
DO WHILE ((input .NE. 'n') .AND. (input .NE. 'y'))
WRITE (*, '(A)') 'Enter y or n: '
READ (*, '(A)') input
END DO