package
0.0.0-20240925070155-7e401e5804bf
Repository: https://github.com/mhaatha/go-learn.git
Documentation: pkg.go.dev
# README
Continue
continue
The continue
keyword stops the current iteration of a loop and continues to the next iteration. continue
is a powerful way to use the "guard clause" pattern within loops.
for i := 0; i < 10; i++ {
if i % 2 == 0 {
continue
}
fmt.Println(i)
}
// 1
// 3
// 5
// 7
// 9
break
The break
keyword stops the current iteration of a loop and exits the loop.
for i := 0; i < 10; i++ {
if i == 5 {
break
}
fmt.Println(i)
}
// 0
// 1
// 2
// 3
// 4
Assignment
As an easter egg, we decided to reward our users with a free text message if they send a prime number of text messages this year.
Complete the printPrimes
function. It should print all of the prime numbers up to and including max
. It should skip any numbers that are not prime.
Here's the psuedocode:
printPrimes(max):
for n in range(2, max+1):
if n is 2:
n is prime, print it
if n is even:
n is not prime, skip to next n
for i in range (3, sqrt(n) + 1):
if i can be multiplied into n:
n is not prime, skip to next n
n is prime, print it
Breakdown
- We skip even numbers because they can't be prime
- We only check up to the square root because anything higher than the square root has no chance of multiplying evenly into
n
- We start checking at 2 because 1 is not prime