I've implementing a brute force string matching algorithm in Clojure. It works as it should, but what I'm looking for is how to make this code "cleaner," and more readable. Note that I also have to have the algorithm print out how it's doing the character comparisons. I don't know about all the conventions to pay attention to, and I'd really like some tips on how to write Clojure better.
What it does: It takes a piece of text, and for each of it's indexes (since the text is of a type String), match it with the input string. If there's a match, we compare the second character to the next index of the text. It's a lot to explain in English, but if you run the program, it prints out what it's doing.
The code:
(defn underscores [n]
(apply str (repeat n "_")))
(defn brute_force_string_match
"Receives text as string type as its first argument,
string in second argument, brute force matches the
string to the text. Assumes text is longer than string."
[text
string]
;; for loop
;; i is 1 less than the amount of No matches you will get
(loop [i 0
j_and_matches [0 0]]
;;outer loop stops when i > n -m
(if (and
(<= i (- (count text) (count string)))
(not= (j_and_matches 0) (count string)))
;; the "while loop"
(do
(println "")
(print "\nPos = " i "\n"text"\n"
(str (underscores i) string))
(recur
(inc i)
(loop [j 0
print_pos i
undscore_amt 0
matches (j_and_matches 1)]
(if (and
(< j (count string))
(= (.charAt string j) (.charAt text (+ i j))))
(do
(print "\n" (str (str (underscores print_pos)) "^ Match! "))
(recur (inc j)
(inc print_pos)
(inc undscore_amt)
(inc matches)))
(do
(if (not= j (count string))
(print "\n" (str (str (underscores print_pos)) "^ No Match ")))
[j matches])))))
(if (= (j_and_matches 0) (count string))
(do (println "\n Pattern found at position " (dec i))
(println "The number of comparisons: " (+ (j_and_matches 1) (dec i)))
(dec i))
-1))))
(print "\n" (str (str (underscores print_pos)) "^ Match! "))
is better expressed as(print (str "\n" (underscores print_pos) "^ Match! "))