The Break Statement
The break statement can be used to jump out of a loop or a switch() statement.
The break statement breaks the loop and continues executing the code after the loop (if any):
Example
for (i=0;i<10;i++) { if (i==3) { break; } x=x + "The number is " + i + "<br>"; }
The continue statement breaks one iteration (in the loop), if a specified condition occurs, and continues with the next iteration in the loop.
This example skips the value of 3:
Example
for (i=0;i<=10;i++) { if (i==3) continue; x=x + "The number is " + i + "<br>"; }
As you have already seen, in the chapter about the switch statement, JavaScript statements can be labeled.
To label JavaScript statements you precede the statements with a colon:
The break and the continue statements are the only JavaScript statements that can "jump out of" a code block.
Syntax:
The continue statement (with or without a label reference) can only be used inside a loop.
The break statement, without a label reference, can only be used inside a loop or a switch.
With a label reference, it can be used to "jump out of" any JavaScript code block:
cars=["BMW","Volvo","Saab","Ford"]; list: { document.write(cars[0] + "<br>"); document.write(cars[1] + "<br>"); document.write(cars[2] + "<br>"); break list; document.write(cars[3] + "<br>"); document.write(cars[4] + "<br>"); document.write(cars[5] + "<br>"); }