One way to translate an imperative for loop to Clojure is to use the for
macro.
(for [i (range 10)] (inc i))
The above function will return all the numbers from 0 to 9 incremented by 1. However, it appears you simply want to iterate over a sequential collection and use each item. If that’s all that you need, then you don’t need to reference an index value, instead you can reference each item directly.
(for [d my-vec-of-data] (my-function d))
However, for this simple case, the map
function would probably be a better choice because it is designed to invoke functions with arguments from collections. The following example is equivalent to the use of for
above.
(map my-function my-vec-of-data)
Both map
and for
return a collection of values made up of the values returned by my-function
. This is because Clojure’s data structures are immutable, so it’s necessary to have a new collection returned. If that isn’t what you need or if your function has side effects, you could use doseq
instead of for
, which returns nil
.