Chapter 3
Exercise 3.1
They all give an int
result with a value of 1
for true and 0
for false.
Exercise 3.2
They all give an int
result with a value of 1
for true and 0
for false.
Exercise 3.3
They guarantee an order of evaluation: left to right, and stop as soon as the overall result can be determined.
Exercise 3.4
Break
can be used to turn a switch
statement
into a set of exclusive choices of action.
Exercise 3.5
Continue
has no special meaning in a switch
statement, but only to an outer do
, while
or
for
statement.
Exercise 3.6
Inside a while
statement, the use of continue may cause the
update of the loop control variable to be missed. It is, of course, the
responsibility of the programmer to get this right.
Exercise 3.7
Because the scope of a label doesn't extend outside the function that it
lives in, you can't use goto to jump from one function to another. Using
the longjmp
library routine, described in Chapter 9, a form of function-to-function jump is supported, but not
a completely general one.