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Home/ Questions/Q 974859
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T03:29:52+00:00 2026-05-16T03:29:52+00:00

Possible Duplicate: In C++ why can’t I write a for() loop like this: for(

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Possible Duplicate:
In C++ why can’t I write a for() loop like this: for( int i = 1, double i2 = 0; …

A C developer would write this:

int myIndex;
for (myIndex=0;myIndex<10;++myIndex) ...

A C++ developer would write this to prevent the loop variable from leaking outside the loop:

for (int myIndex=0;myIndex<10;++myIndex) ...

However, if you have 2 loop variables, you cannot do this anymore. The following doesn’t compile:

for (int myIndex=0,MyElement *ptr=Pool->First;ptr;++myIndex,ptr=ptr->next) ...

The comma operator does not allow two variables to be defined this way, so we have to write it like this:

int myIndex;
MyElement *ptr;
for (myIndex=0,ptr=Pool->First;ptr;++myIndex,ptr=ptr->next) ...

Which defeats the advantage of having real loop-local variables.

A solution could be to put the whole construction between braces, like this:

{
int myIndex;
MyElement *ptr;
for (myIndex=0,ptr=Pool->First;ptr;++myIndex,ptr=ptr->next) ...
}

But this is hardly more elegant.

Isn’t there a better way of doing this in C++ (or C++0x)?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T03:29:52+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:29 am

    You just have to understand the first statement is a declaration (and that comma is not the comma operator). It’s not any harder to do:

    for (int i, double d; ...)
    

    Than it is:

    int i, double d;
    

    Because for (init cond; expr) statement gets expanded to:

    {
        init
        while (cond)
        {
            statement
            expr;
        }
    }
    

    A trick is to make that init statement a struct definition and instance, like:

    for (struct { int myIndex; MyElement* ptr;} data = {0, Pool->First};
        data.ptr;
        ++data.myIndex, data.ptr = data.ptr->next)
        {
            // blah...
        }
    

    Which becomes the same as:

    {
        struct
        {
            int myIndex;
            MyElement* ptr;
        } data = {0, Pool->First};
    
        while (data.ptr)
        {
            {
                // blah...
            }
            ++data.myIndex, data.ptr = data.ptr->next;
        }
    }
    

    But I find that pretty ugly. In practice, I’d just split it up like you have. If scope is really a problem, which it probably isn’t, throw the extra braces around there.

    I don’t think there’s much to improve here without a bit of boilerplate code.

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