break Statement
The break statement jumps out of the innermost for,
while, or do loop that encloses it. The
following example finds the smallest divisor of any integer, and also
identifies prime numbers:
awk '# find smallest divisor of num
{ num = $1
for (div = 2; div*div <= num; div++)
if (num % div == 0)
break
if (num % div == 0)
printf "Smallest divisor of %d is %d\n", num, div
else
printf "%d is prime\n", num
}'
When the remainder is zero in the first if statement, awk
immediately breaks out of the containing for loop. This means
that awk proceeds immediately to the statement following the loop
and continues processing. (This is very different from the exit
statement which stops the entire awk program.
See section The exit Statement.)
Here is another program equivalent to the previous one. It illustrates how
the condition of a for or while could just as well be
replaced with a break inside an if:
awk '# find smallest divisor of num
{ num = $1
for (div = 2; ; div++) {
if (num % div == 0) {
printf "Smallest divisor of %d is %d\n", num, div
break
}
if (div*div > num) {
printf "%d is prime\n", num
break
}
}
}'
As described above, the break statement has no meaning when
used outside the body of a loop. However, although it was never documented,
historical implementations of awk have treated the break
statement outside of a loop as if it were a next statement
(see section The next Statement).
Recent versions of Unix awk no longer allow this usage.
gawk will support this use of break only if `--traditional'
has been specified on the command line
(see section Command Line Options).
Otherwise, it will be treated as an error, since the POSIX standard
specifies that break should only be used inside the body of a
loop (d.c.).
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