Performs one or more statements repeatedly: either the specified number of times or until Break is encountered.
Loop , Count
If omitted, the loop continues indefinitely until a Break or Return is encountered. Otherwise, specify how many times (iterations) to perform the loop.
If Count is a variable reference such as %ItemCount%, the loop is skipped entirely whenever the variable is blank or contains a number less than 1.
Due to the need to support file-pattern loops, Count cannot be an expression. However, as with all non-expression parameters, an expression can be forcibly used by preceding it with a % and a space. For example: Loop % Count + 1
. In such cases, the expression is evaluated only once, right before the loop begins.
The loop statement is usually followed by a block, which is a collection of statements that form the body of the loop. However, a loop with only a single statement does not require a block (an "if" and its "else" count as a single statement for this purpose).
A common use of this statement is an infinite loop that uses the Break statement somewhere in the loop's body to determine when to stop the loop.
The use of Break and Continue inside a loop are encouraged as alternatives to Goto, since they generally make a script more understandable and maintainable. One can also create a "While" or "Do...While/Until" loop by making the first or last statement of the loop's body an IF statement that conditionally issues the Break statement, but the use of While or Loop...Until is usually preferred.
The built-in variable A_Index contains the number of the current loop iteration. It contains 1 the first time the loop's body is executed. For the second time, it contains 2; and so on. If an inner loop is enclosed by an outer loop, the inner loop takes precedence. A_Index works inside all types of loops, including file loops and registry loops; but A_Index contains 0 outside of a loop.
The One True Brace (OTB) style may optionally be used with normal loops (but not specialized loops such as file-pattern and parsing). For example:
Loop { ... } Loop %RepeatCount% { ... }
Specialized loops: Loops can be used to automatically retrieve files, folders, or registry items (one at a time). See file loop and registry loop for details. In addition, file-reading loops can operate on the entire contents of a file, one line at a time. Finally, parsing loops can operate on the individual fields contained inside a delimited string.
Until, While-loop, For-loop, Files-and-folders loop, Registry loop, File-reading loop, Parsing loop, Break, Continue, Blocks