How to break outer cycle in Ruby?
Consider throw
/catch
. Normally the outside loop in the below code will run five times, but with throw you can change it to whatever you like, breaking it in the process. Consider this perfectly valid ruby code:
catch (:done) do
5.times { |i|
5.times { |j|
puts "#{i} #{j}"
throw :done if i + j > 5
}
}
end
What you want is non-local control-flow, which Ruby has several options for doing:
- Continuations,
- Exceptions, and
-
throw
/catch
Continuations
Pros:
- Continuations are the standard mechanism for non-local control-flow. In fact, you can build any non-local control-flow (subroutines, procedures, functions, methods, coroutines, state machines, generators, conditions, exceptions) on top of them: they are pretty much the nicer twin of
GOTO
.
Cons:
- Continuations are not a mandatory part of the Ruby Language Specification, which means that some implementations (XRuby, JRuby, Ruby.NET, IronRuby) don't implement them. So, you can't rely on them.
Exceptions
Pros:
- There is a paper that proves mathematically that Exceptions can be more powerful than Continuations. IOW: they can do everything that continuations can do, and more, so you can use them as a replacement for continuations.
- Exceptions are universally available.
Cons:
- They are called "exceptions" which makes people think that they are "only for exceptional circumstances". This means three things: somebody reading your code might not understand it, the implementation might not be optimized for it (and, yes, exceptions are godawful slow in almost any Ruby implementation) and worst of all, you will get sick of all those people constantly, mindlessly babbling "exceptions are only for exceptional circumstances", as soon as they glance at your code. (Of course, they won't even try to understand what you are doing.)
throw
/catch
This is (roughly) what it would look like:
catch :aaa do
stuff.each do |otherstuff|
foo.each do |bar|
throw :aaa if somethingbad
end
end
end
Pros:
- The same as exceptions.
- In Ruby 1.9, using exceptions for control-flow is actually part of the language specification! Loops, enumerators, iterators and such all use a
StopIteration
exception for termination.
Cons:
- The Ruby community hates them even more than using exceptions for control-flow.
No, there isn't.
Your options are:
- put the loop in a method and use return to break from the outer loop
- set or return a flag from the inner loop and then check that flag in the outer loop and break from it when the flag is set (which is kind of cumbersome)
- use throw/catch to break out of the loop
while c1
while c2
do_break=true
end
next if do_break
end
or "break if do_break" depending on what you want