public class Main
{
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println("Start\n");
byte i;
for(i=0; i<10; i--) {
System.out.print(i+", ");
}
System.out.print("\b\b");
System.out.println("\n\n\"i\" value is "+i+"\n\nEnd");
}
}
Start
0, -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9, -10, -11, -12, -13, -14, -15, -16, -17, -18, -19, -20, -21, -22, -23, -24, -25, -26, -27, -28, -29, -30, -31, -32, -33, -34, -35, -36, -37, -38, -39, -40, -41, -42, -43, -44, -45, -46, -47, -48, -49, -50, -51, -52, -53, -54, -55, -56, -57, -58, -59, -60, -61, -62, -63, -64, -65, -66, -67, -68, -69, -70, -71, -72, -73, -74, -75, -76, -77, -78, -79, -80, -81, -82, -83, -84, -85, -86, -87, -88, -89, -90, -91, -92, -93, -94, -95, -96, -97, -98, -99, -100, -101, -102, -103, -104, -105, -106, -107, -108, -109, -110, -111, -112, -113, -114, -115, -116, -117, -118, -119, -120, -121, -122, -123, -124, -125, -126, -127, -128,
"i" value is 127
End
This loop may look like an infinite loop because the value of i keeps decreasing and will always seem to be less than 10. However, the variable i is declared as a byte, and in Java a byte can only store values from -128 to 127. The loop starts from 0 and keeps decrementing until it reaches -128. After that, Java cannot store -129 in a byte, so the value automatically wraps around to 127 due to overflow. Once i becomes 127, the condition i < 10 becomes false, and the loop terminates. Thatβs why this loop is not infinite.
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