for
The for statement creates a loop that consists of three optional expressions, enclosed in parentheses and separated by semicolons, followed by a statement (usually a block statement) to be executed in the loop.
Syntax
for ([initialization]; [condition]; [final-expression])
   statement
initialization- 
    
An expression (including assignment expressions) or variable declaration evaluated once before the loop begins. Typically used to initialize a counter variable. This expression may optionally declare new variables with
varorletkeywords. Variables declared withvarare not local to the loop, i.e. they are in the same scope theforloop is in. Variables declared withletare local to the statement.The result of this expression is discarded.
 condition- 
    
An expression to be evaluated before each loop iteration. If this expression evaluates to true,
statementis executed. This conditional test is optional. If omitted, the condition always evaluates to true. If the expression evaluates to false, execution skips to the first expression following theforconstruct. final-expression- 
    
An expression to be evaluated at the end of each loop iteration. This occurs before the next evaluation of
condition. Generally used to update or increment the counter variable. statement- 
    
A statement that is executed as long as the condition evaluates to true. To execute multiple statements within the loop, use a block statement (
{ /* ... */ }) to group those statements. To execute no statement within the loop, use an empty statement (;). 
Examples
Using for
  The following for statement starts by declaring the variable
  i and initializing it to 0. It checks that i is
  less than nine, performs the two succeeding statements, and increments i by
  1 after each pass through the loop.
for (let i = 0; i < 9; i++) {
   console.log(i);
   // more statements
}
Optional for expressions
All three expressions in the head of the for loop are optional.
  For example, in the initialization block it is not required to
  initialize variables:
var i = 0;
for (; i < 9; i++) {
    console.log(i);
    // more statements
}
  Like the initialization block, the
  condition block is also optional. If you are omitting this
  expression, you must make sure to break the loop in the body in order to not create an
  infinite loop.
for (let i = 0;; i++) {
   console.log(i);
   if (i > 3) break;
   // more statements
}
  You can also omit all three blocks. Again, make sure to use a
  break statement to end the loop and also modify
  (increase) a variable, so that the condition for the break statement is true at some
  point.
var i = 0;
for (;;) {
  if (i > 3) break;
  console.log(i);
  i++;
}
Using for without a statement
  The following for cycle calculates the offset position of a node in the
  final-expression section, and therefore it does not require the
  use of a statement section, a semicolon is used instead.
function showOffsetPos(sId) {
  var nLeft = 0, nTop = 0;
  for (
    var oItNode = document.getElementById(sId); /* initialization */
    oItNode; /* condition */
    nLeft += oItNode.offsetLeft, nTop += oItNode.offsetTop, oItNode = oItNode.offsetParent /* final-expression */
  ); /* semicolon */
  console.log('Offset position of \'' + sId + '\' element:\n left: ' + nLeft + 'px;\n top: ' + nTop + 'px;');
}
/* Example call: */
showOffsetPos('content');
// Output:
// "Offset position of "content" element:
// left: 0px;
// top: 153px;"
Note: This is one of the few cases in JavaScript where the semicolon is mandatory. Indeed, without the semicolon the line that follows the cycle declaration will be considered a statement.
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| ECMAScript Language Specification  # sec-for-statement  | 
Browser compatibility
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