Continue Statement

The continue statement in C language is used to bring the program control to the beginning of the loop.

The continue statement skips some lines of code inside the loop and continues with the next iteration.

It is mainly used for a condition so that we can skip some code for a particular condition.

    
        Syntax:
        //loop statements
        continue;
        //some lines of the code which is to be skipped
    


    
        #include<stdio.h>
        
        int main ()
        {
            int i = 0;
            
            while(i!=10)
            {
                printf("%d", i);
                continue;
                i++;
            }
        }
    


    
        #include<stdio.h>

        int main(){
            int i=1;//initializing a local variable
        
            //starting a loop from 1 to 10
            for(i=1;i<=10;i++){
                if(i==5){//if value of i is equal to 5, it will continue the loop
                    continue;
                }
                
            printf("%d \n",i);
            
            }//end of for loop
            return 0;
        }
    

As you can see, 5 is not printed on the console because loop is continued at i==5.

Continue statement with inner loop

In such case, C continue statement continues only inner loop, but not outer loop.

    
        #include<stdio.h>

        int main(){
            int i=1,j=1;//initializing a local variable
        
            for(i=1;i<=3;i++){
                for(j=1;j<=3;j++){
                    if(i==2 && j==2){
                        continue;//will continue loop of j only
                    }
                    printf("%d %d\n",i,j);
                }
            }//end of for loop
            return 0;
        }