Submitted by tushar pramanick on Fri, 03/08/2013 - 00:21

The goto Statement

I feel that this book would not be not complete without mentioning the goto statement, although I do not recommend that you use the goto statement unless it's absolutely necessary. The main reason that the goto statement is discouraged is because its usage may make the C program unreliable and hard to debug.

The following is the general form of the goto statement:

labelname:
   statement1;
   statement2;
   .
   .
   .
   goto  labelname;


Here labelname is a label name that tells the goto statement where to jump. You have to place labelname in two places: One is at the place where the goto statement is going to jump (note that a colon must follow the label name), and the other is the place following the goto keyword. You have to follow the same rules to make a label name as you name a variable or function.

Also, the place for the goto statement to jump to can appear either before or after the statement.

Related Items

The if statement

The if statement

If life were a straight line, it would be very boring. The same thing is true for programming. It would be too dull if the statements in your program could only be executed in the order in which they appear.

Mathematical Functions in C

Mathematical Functions in C

Basically, the math functions provided by the C language can be classified into three groups:

    Trigonometric and hyperbolic functions, such as acos(), cos(), and cosh().

Changing Data Sizes

Changing Data Sizes

Enabling or Disabling the Sign Bit

Enabling or Disabling the Sign Bit

As you know, it's very easy to express a negative number in decimal. All you need to do is put a minus sign in front of the absolute value of the number. But how does the computer represent a negative number in the binary format?

Question and Answer

Question and Answer

    Q Which bit can be used as the sign bit in an integer?