>>> a =[0,1,2]>>>for element in a:...ifnot element:...pass...print element
...012>>>for element in a:...ifnot element:...continue...print element
...12
Yes, they do completely different things. pass simply does nothing, while continue goes on with the next loop iteration. In your example, the difference would become apparent if you added another statement after the if: After executing pass, this further statement would be executed. After continue, it wouldn’t.
>>> a = [0, 1, 2]
>>> for element in a:
... if not element:
... pass
... print element
...
0
1
2
>>> for element in a:
... if not element:
... continue
... print element
...
1
2
for element in some_list:ifnot element:passprint1# will print after passfor element in some_list:ifnot element:continueprint1# will not print after continue
Yes, there is a difference. continue forces the loop to start at the next iteration while pass means “there is no code to execute here” and will continue through the remainder or the loop body.
Run these and see the difference:
for element in some_list:
if not element:
pass
print 1 # will print after pass
for element in some_list:
if not element:
continue
print 1 # will not print after continue
In your example, there will be no difference, since both statements appear at the end of the loop. pass is simply a placeholder, in that it does nothing (it passes execution to the next statement). continue, on the other hand, has a definite purpose: it tells the loop to continue as if it had just restarted.
for element in some_list:
if not element:
pass
print element
is very different from
for element in some_list:
if not element:
continue
print element
>>>for element in some_list:...if element ==1:...print"Pass executed"...pass...print element
...0Pass executed
12>>>for element in some_list:...if element ==1:...print"Continue executed"...continue...print element
...0Continue executed
2
There is a difference between them, continue skips the loop’s current iteration and executes the next iteration. pass does nothing. It’s an empty statement placeholder.
I would rather give you an example, which will clarify this more better.
>>> for element in some_list:
... if element == 1:
... print "Pass executed"
... pass
... print element
...
0
Pass executed
1
2
>>> for element in some_list:
... if element == 1:
... print "Continue executed"
... continue
... print element
...
0
Continue executed
2
Yes, there is a difference. Continue actually skips the rest of the current iteration of the loop (returning to the beginning). Pass is a blank statement that does nothing.
Difference between pass and continue in a for loop:
So why pass in python?
If you want to create a empty class, method or block.
Examples:
class MyException(Exception):
pass
try:
1/0
except:
pass
without ‘pass’ in the above examples will throw IndentationError.
回答 8
x =[1,2,3,4]for i in x:if i==2:pass#Pass actually does nothing. It continues to execute statements below it.print"This statement is from pass."for i in x:if i==2:continue#Continue gets back to top of the loop.And statements below continue are executed.print"This statement is from continue."
输出是
>>>This statement isfrompass.
再次,让我们运行相同的代码进行较小的更改。
x =[1,2,3,4]for i in x:if i==2:pass#Pass actually does nothing. It continues to execute statements below it.print"This statement is from pass."for i in x:if i==2:continue#Continue gets back to top of the loop.And statements below continue are executed.print"This statement is from continue."
x = [1,2,3,4]
for i in x:
if i==2:
pass #Pass actually does nothing. It continues to execute statements below it.
print "This statement is from pass."
for i in x:
if i==2:
continue #Continue gets back to top of the loop.And statements below continue are executed.
print "This statement is from continue."
The output is
>>> This statement is from pass.
Again, let run same code with minor changes.
x = [1,2,3,4]
for i in x:
if i==2:
pass #Pass actually does nothing. It continues to execute statements below it.
print "This statement is from pass."
for i in x:
if i==2:
continue #Continue gets back to top of the loop.And statements below continue are executed.
print "This statement is from continue."
The output is –
>>> This statement is from pass.
This statement is from pass.
This statement is from pass.
This statement is from pass.
This statement is from continue.
This statement is from continue.
This statement is from continue.
Pass doesn’t do anything. Computation is unaffected. But continue gets back to top of the loop to procced with next computation.
Pass: Python works purely on indentation! There are no empty curly braces, unlike other languages.
So, if you want to do nothing in case a condition is true there is no option other than pass.
Continue: This is useful only in case of loops. In case, for a range of values, you don’t want to execute the remaining statements of the loop after that condition is true for that particular pass, then you will have to use continue.
pass could be used in scenarios when you need some empty functions, classes or loops for future implementations, and there’s no requirement of executing any code. continue is used in scenarios when no when some condition has met within a loop and you need to skip the current iteration and move to the next one.