Repeating work
Loops let you run the same block of code many times — once per item in a list, once per character in a string, or until a condition becomes false. They are how you process collections of data without writing the same line a hundred times.
```c
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
printf("%d\n", i);
}int n = 0; while (n < 3) n++; ```
for vs while
Use a for loop when you know up-front how many times to iterate or you are walking through a collection. Use while when you have to keep going until some condition is met — for example, reading lines from a file until the end is reached.
break and continue
break stops a loop immediately and continue skips to the next iteration. Use them to handle early exit conditions, but avoid burying them deep inside a complex loop — that makes flow hard to follow.