goto statement in C

goto statement in C
A goto statement in C programming language provides an unconditional jump from the goto to a labeled statement in the same function.

NOTE: Use of goto statement is highly discouraged in any programming language because it makes difficult to trace the control flow of a program, making the program hard to understand and hard to modify. Any program that uses a goto can be rewritten so that it doesn't need the goto.

Syntax:
The syntax for a goto statement in C is as follows:
goto label;
..
.
label
: statement;
Here label can be any plain text except C keyword and it can be set anywhere in the C program above or below to goto statement.

Flow Diagram:



Example:
#include <stdio.h>

int main ()
{
/* local variable definition */
int a = 10;

/* do loop execution */
LOOP
:do
{
if( a == 15)
{
/* skip the iteration */
a
= a + 1;
goto LOOP;
}
printf
("value of a: %d\n", a);
a
++;

}while( a < 20 );

return 0;
}

When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces following result:

value of a: 10
value of a: 11
value of a: 12
value of a: 13
value of a: 14
value of a: 16
value of a: 17
value of a: 18
value of a: 19


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