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title Overview of C++ Statements | Microsoft Docs
ms.custom
ms.date 11/04/2016
ms.technology
cpp-language
ms.topic language-reference
dev_langs
C++
helpviewer_keywords
statements [C++]
ms.assetid e56996b2-b846-4b99-ac94-ac72fffc5ec7
author mikeblome
ms.author mblome
ms.workload
cplusplus

Overview of C++ Statements

C++ statements are executed sequentially, except when an expression statement, a selection statement, an iteration statement, or a jump statement specifically modifies that sequence.

Statements may be of the following types:

labeled-statement
expression-statement
compound-statement
selection-statement
iteration-statement
jump-statement
declaration-statement
try-throw-catch

In most cases, the C++ statement syntax is identical to that of ANSI C. The primary difference between the two is that in C, declarations are allowed only at the start of a block; C++ adds the declaration-statement, which effectively removes this restriction. This enables you to introduce variables at a point in the program where a precomputed initialization value can be calculated.

Declaring variables inside blocks also allows you to exercise precise control over the scope and lifetime of those variables.

The topics on statements describe the following C++ keywords:

break else __if_exists __try
case __except __if_not_exists try
catch for __leave while
continue goto return
default __finally switch
do if throw

See also

Statements