Basically, there is no practical way to do that in Java. You appear to be trying to do the equivalent of a "goto", and that is not supported in Java. The break label
and continue label
statements can only branch to an enclosing labelled statement.
Now according to the Java formal grammar you could write this:
s: {
continue s;
System.out.println("I am not supposed to print this");
}
System.out.println("I am suppose to print this");
but that still won't compile for two reasons:
See also: Alternative to a goto statement in Java
But there is one rather tricky way to get your code to "work":
static final boolean flag = true; // class attribute ...
...
s: {
if (flag) break s;
System.out.println("I am not supposed to print this");
}
System.out.println("I am suppose to print this");
The "test" there will be evaluated by the compiler so that the break
is effectively unconditional. But the JLS says that the first println
will be treated as reachable, so that you won't get an unreachable code error.
I guess this might be useful if you are generating this source code. Apart from that, it is (IMO) just a curiosity. It is simpler to do this with a regular if
/ else
statement ... or by deleting the first "print" entirely.