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break statement in python

Python break statement is used to terminate or stop the execution of a loop based on some condition.
As soon as the loop encounters break keyword, it is terminated and the execution resumes from the first line after the loop.
break use case
Suppose there is a large list of names, a dictionary of student objects or a tuple of numbers and you are searching for a particular value in these collections.
Now if the element you are searching is found at the second position, why should you check all the other elements. In such a scenario, break is used.
break is also used to terminate an infinite loop explained later in this post.
Syntax
break itself is a keyword in python. It does not have any parenthesis or arguments. Placing it will alone perform the required task.
Thus, syntax of break is

break

break can only be written in a loop. Writing it outside of a loop will raise a compiler error.

Control Flow
break is written inside a loop. When the control finds break, it terminates the loop at the same instant and starts executing the statements written after the loop.
Execution sequence of a loop with break can be shown with below flow chart.

Remember that break only exits the loop inside which it is written. For nested loops(loop inside another loop), the statements of the outer loop will still be executed.
break python for loop example
Below is an example of break statement inside a python program. It contains a for loop which iterates over a list of programming languages. Aim is to search for “python” in the list.

# list of languages
languages = ["java", "javascript",
            "C", "C++", "python", "R",
             "ruby", "Cobol", "Go", "Pascal",
             "C#", "VB", "PHP", "Swift"
             "Fortran", "Groovy", "Haskell",
             "Kotlin", "LINQ", "Objective-C"]
# value to search
search = "python"

# iterate over languages
for language  in languages:
    print("Checking list item:", language)
    # compare  
    if language == search:
        print(search,"found in list")
        # terminate loop
        break

Below is the output of the program

Checking list item: java
Checking list item: javascript
Checking list item: C
Checking list item: C++
Checking list item: python
python found in list

Look, as soon as it found the item in the list, the loop is terminated, thus saving unnecessary iterations.
break while loop example
break statement can be used with any looping construct, be it for or while. Above example modified to run with while loop is given below.

languages = ["java", "javascript",
            "C", "C++", "python", "R",
             "ruby", "Cobol", "Go", "Pascal",
             "C#", "VB", "PHP", "Swift"
             "Fortran", "Groovy", "Haskell",
             "Kotlin", "LINQ", "Objective-C"]
search = "python"
count = 0

# iterate over list
while count < len(languages):
    # get current list item
    language = languages[count]
    print("Checking list item:", language)
    # compare
    if language == search:
        print(search,"found in list")
        # terminate
        break
    # increment loop counter
    count += 1

Output is the same.
break in nested loop
As stated earlier, break terminates only the loop inside which it is written. If there are more than one loop inside another loop, then break will move the control out of its own loop. Example,

# outer loop
for i in range(5):
    print("***** Outer loop count start *****:", i)
    # inner loop
    for j in range(10):
        print("Inner loop count", j)
        # check condition
        if(j == 1):
            print("##### Terminating inner loop #####")
            # terminate inner loop
            break
    print("***** Outer loop count end *****:",i)
    print("-----------------------------------")

Outer loop is executed 5 times. Inner loop is intended to run 10 times but it is terminated when the counter reaches 1 with break.
Output of above program is

***** Outer loop count start *****: 0
Inner loop count 0
Inner loop count 1
##### Terminating inner loop #####
***** Outer loop count end *****: 0
———————————–
***** Outer loop count start *****: 1
Inner loop count 0
Inner loop count 1
##### Terminating inner loop #####
***** Outer loop count end *****: 1
———————————–
***** Outer loop count start *****: 2
Inner loop count 0
Inner loop count 1
##### Terminating inner loop #####
***** Outer loop count end *****: 2
———————————–
***** Outer loop count start *****: 3
Inner loop count 0
Inner loop count 1
##### Terminating inner loop #####
***** Outer loop count end *****: 3
———————————–
***** Outer loop count start *****: 4
Inner loop count 0
Inner loop count 1
##### Terminating inner loop #####
***** Outer loop count end *****: 4
———————————–

Output clearly shows that even after inner loop breaks, outer loop is executed completely.
Breaking infinite loop
Many times you do not know the condition till which a loop should be executed. For example, you might want to keep checking till a connection(to a database or network) is established.
As soon as the connection is made, execute some task. In such situations, the code which checks the connection may be placed in an infinite loop which is terminated as soon as connection is created. Example,

while True:
   # check database connection
   # .....
   #
   if connected:
      break
# save data

break and finally
If a break is enclosed between try-except-finally block used for exception handling in python, then finally block is executed before the loop is terminated. Example,

# list of languages
languages = ["java", "javascript",
            "C", "C++", "python", "R"
            "ruby", "Cobol", "Go", "Pascal"]

# value to search
search = "python"

# iterate over languages
for language  in languages:
    print("Checking list item:", language)
    # compare
    if language == search:
        try:
            print(search,"found in list")
            # terminate loop
            break
        except:
            print("Except block")
        finally:
            print("*** Finally block ***")
print("Loop completed")

Output of above code is

Checking list item: java
Checking list item: javascript
Checking list item: C
Checking list item: C++
Checking list item: python
python found in list
*** Finally block ***
Loop completed

It shows that if break statement is written between finally, then finally block is executed before the loop exits.
Hope this article was useful in explaining the concept of break statement and its application in python. Click the clap if you found it helpful.

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