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Showing content from https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/../language/statements.html below:

Statements - cppreference.com

Statements are fragments of the C++ program that are executed in sequence. The body of any function is a sequence of statements. For example:

int main()
{
    int n = 1;                        // declaration statement
    n = n + 1;                        // expression statement
    std::cout << "n = " << n << '\n'; // expression statement
    return 0;                         // return statement
}

C++ includes the following types of statements:

[edit] Labeled statements

A labeled statement labels a statement for control flow purposes.

label - the label applied to the statement (defined below) statement - the statement which the label applies to, it can be a labeled statement itself, allowing multiple labels [edit] Labels

label is defined as

attr (optional) identifier : (1) attr (optional) case constexpr : (2) attr (optional) default: (3) 2) case

label in a

switch

statement;

3) default

label in a

switch

statement.

An attribute sequence attr may appear just at the beginning of the label (in which case it applies to the label), or just before any statement itself, in which case it applies to the entire statement.

(since C++11)

A label with an identifier declared inside a function matches all goto statements with the same identifier in that function, in all nested blocks, before and after its own declaration.

Two labels in a function must not have the same identifier.

Besides being added to a statement, labels can also be used anywhere in compound statements.

(since C++23)

Labels are not found by unqualified lookup: a label can have the same name as any other entity in the program.

void f()
{
    {
        goto label; // label in scope even though declared later
        label:      // label can appear at the end of a block standalone since C++23
    }
    goto label; // label ignores block scope
}
 
void g()
{
    goto label; // error: label not in scope in g()
}
[edit] Control-flow-limited statements

The following statements are control-flow-limited statements :

For each control-flow-limited statement S:

[edit] Expression statements

An expression statement is an expression followed by a semicolon.

attr (optional) expression (optional) ;

Most statements in a typical C++ program are expression statements, such as assignments or function calls.

An expression statement without an expression is called a null statement. It is often used to provide an empty body to a for or while loop. It can also be used to carry a label in the end of a compound statement.(until C++23)

[edit] Compound statements

A compound statement or block groups a sequence of statements into a single statement.

attr (optional) { statement... (optional) label... (optional)(since C++23) }

When one statement is expected, but multiple statements need to be executed in sequence (for example, in an if statement or a loop), a compound statement may be used:

if (x > 5)          // start of if statement
{                   // start of block
    int n = 1;      // declaration statement
    std::cout << n; // expression statement
}                   // end of block, end of if statement

Each compound statement introduces its own block scope; variables declared inside a block are destroyed at the closing brace in reverse order:

int main()
{ // start of outer block
    {                                // start of inner block
        std::ofstream f("test.txt"); // declaration statement
        f << "abc\n";                // expression statement
    }                                // end of inner block, f is flushed and closed
    std::ifstream f("test.txt"); // declaration statement
    std::string str;             // declaration statement
    f >> str;                    // expression statement
} // end of outer block, str is destroyed, f is closed

A label at the end of a compound statement is treated as if it were followed by a null statement.

(since C++23) [edit] Selection statements

A selection statement chooses between one of several control flows.

attr (optional) if constexpr(optional) ( init-statement (optional) condition ) statement (1) attr (optional) if constexpr(optional) ( init-statement (optional) condition ) statement
    else statement (2) attr (optional) switch ( init-statement (optional) condition ) statement (3) attr (optional) if !(optional) consteval compound-statement (4) (since C++23) attr (optional) if !(optional) consteval compound-statement else statement (5) (since C++23) 2) if

statement with an else clause;

[edit] Iteration statements

An iteration statement repeatedly executes some code.

attr (optional) while ( condition ) statement (1) attr (optional) do statement while ( expression ) ; (2) attr (optional) for ( init-statement condition (optional) ; expression (optional) ) statement (3) attr (optional) for
    ( init-statement (optional)(since C++20) for-range-decl : for-range-init ) statement (4) (since C++11) [edit] Jump statements

A jump statement unconditionally transfers control flow.

attr (optional) break; (1) attr (optional) continue; (2) attr (optional) return expression (optional) ; (3) attr (optional) return braced-init-list ; (4) (since C++11) attr (optional) goto identifier ; (5) 3) return

statement with an optional expression;

Note: for all jump statements, transfer out of a loop, out of a block, or back past an initialized variable with automatic storage duration involves the destruction of objects with automatic storage duration that are in scope at the point transferred from but not at the point transferred to. If multiple objects were initialized, the order of destruction is the opposite of the order of initialization.

Assertion statements

A contract assertion.

contract_assert attr (optional) ( predicate ) ; (since C++26) [edit] Declaration statements

A declaration statement introduces one or more identifiers into a block.

[edit] try blocks

A try block catches exceptions thrown when executing other statements.

attr (optional) try compound-statement handler-sequence (1) Atomic and synchronized blocks

An atomic and synchronized block provides transactional memory.

synchronized compound-statement (1) (TM TS) atomic_noexcept compound-statement (2) (TM TS) atomic_cancel compound-statement (3) (TM TS) atomic_commit compound-statement (4) (TM TS) (TM TS) [edit] Substatements

A substatement of a statement is one of the following:

A statement S1 encloses a statement S2 if any of the following conditions is satisfied:

A statement S1 is enclosed by a statement S2 if S2 encloses S1.

[edit] See also

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