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Converting any string into camel case

How can I convert a string into camel case using javascript regex?

EquipmentClass name or Equipment className or equipment class name or Equipment Class Name

should all become: equipmentClassName.

I made a jsperf test of the various methods. the results were slightly inconclusive. it seems to depend on the input string.
A new jsperf test with a few different strings to test and a wider variety of implementations: jsperf.com/camel-casing-regexp-or-character-manipulation/1 -- this leads me to the conclusion that for the average case, despite the asker's phrasing of this question, regular expressions are not what you want. Not only are they much harder to understand, they also (at least for current versions of Chrome) take about twice as long to run.

T
Timo Türschmann

Looking at your code, you can achieve it with only two replace calls:

function camelize(str) {
  return str.replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w)/g, function(word, index) {
    return index === 0 ? word.toLowerCase() : word.toUpperCase();
  }).replace(/\s+/g, '');
}

camelize("EquipmentClass name");
camelize("Equipment className");
camelize("equipment class name");
camelize("Equipment Class Name");
// all output "equipmentClassName"

Edit: Or in with a single replace call, capturing the white spaces also in the RegExp.

function camelize(str) {
  return str.replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w|\s+)/g, function(match, index) {
    if (+match === 0) return ""; // or if (/\s+/.test(match)) for white spaces
    return index === 0 ? match.toLowerCase() : match.toUpperCase();
  });
}

Great code, and it ended up winning jsperf.com/js-camelcase/5 . Care to contribute a version that can handle (remove) non-alpha chars? camelize("Let's Do It!") === "let'SDoIt!" sad face. I'll try myself but fear I will just add another replace.
.. since the non-alpha shouldn't affect the case, I'm not sure it can be done better than return this.replace(/[^a-z ]/ig, '').replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w|\s+)/g,...
For my ES2015+ friends: a one liner based on the above code. const toCamelCase = (str) => str.replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w)/g, (ltr, idx) => idx === 0 ? ltr.toLowerCase() : ltr.toUpperCase()).replace(/\s+/g, '');
While this wasn't a case asked by example, another common input you'll likely see is "EQUIPMENT CLASS NAME", for which this method fails.
@EdmundReed you can simply convert the whole string to lowercase prior to converting to camel case by chaining the .toLowerCase() method in. Eg. using @tabrindle's solution above: const toCamelCase = (str) => str.toLowerCase().replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w)/g, (ltr, idx) => idx === 0 ? ltr.toLowerCase() : ltr.toUpperCase()).replace(/\s+/g, '');
d
d4nyll

If anyone is using lodash, there is a _.camelCase() function.

_.camelCase('Foo Bar');
// → 'fooBar'

_.camelCase('--foo-bar--');
// → 'fooBar'

_.camelCase('__FOO_BAR__');
// → 'fooBar'

This answer should definitely appear further up. Lodash provides a complete set to convert strings between different cases.
Why should one install a whole lodash package just for this purpose and the OP specifically wanted a solution using javascript regex.
@PeterMoses 1) My answer reads "If anyone is using lodash", not "you should install Lodash to do this" 2) Whilst the question body refers to JavaScript RegEx, many people land here because the title reads "Converting any string into camel case" 3) You do not need to import the "whole" lodash library; you can import just the methods you need, or use per method packages like lodash.camelcase instead (which has since been deprecated) 4) You can mitigate a large bundle by implementing tree shaking
@d4nyll - great suggestion. Cheers!
s
smilyface

To get camelCase

ES5

var camalize = function camalize(str) {
    return str.toLowerCase().replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+(.)/g, function(match, chr)
    {
        return chr.toUpperCase();
    });
}

ES6

var camalize = function camalize(str) {
    return str.toLowerCase().replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+(.)/g, (m, chr) => chr.toUpperCase());
}

var camelSentence = function camelSentence(str) {
    return  (" " + str).toLowerCase().replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+(.)/g, function(match, chr)
    {
        return chr.toUpperCase();
    });
}

Note :
For those language with accents. Do include À-ÖØ-öø-ÿ with the regex as following
.replace(/[^a-zA-ZÀ-ÖØ-öø-ÿ0-9]+(.)/g This is only for one language. For another language, you have to search and find


The best answer here - clean and concise.
ES6 just made everything lowercase for me
@Luis added https://stackoverflow.com/posts/52551910/revisions ES6, I haven't tested it. I will check and update.
it will not work if you pass camelized string. We need to check if we have already camalized string.
It doesn't work right when the string opens with a space: ` one two` -> OneTwo, should be oneTwo. Works properly in my answer ;)
S
Scott Klarenbach

I just ended up doing this:

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function(str) {
    return str
        .replace(/\s(.)/g, function($1) { return $1.toUpperCase(); })
        .replace(/\s/g, '')
        .replace(/^(.)/, function($1) { return $1.toLowerCase(); });
}

I was trying to avoid chaining together multiple replace statements. Something where I'd have $1, $2, $3 in my function. But that type of grouping is hard to understand, and your mention about cross browser problems is something I never thought about as well.


That looks fine to me, and nothing looks suspicious as far as cross-browser issues. (Not that I'm a super-expert or anything.)
If you're going to use the String.prototype, why not just use 'this' instead of sending a 'str' parameter?
For better browser compatibility please use this instead of str (and remove the parameter from the function call)
You just need to use this.valueOf() instead of passing str. Alternatively (as in my case) this.toLowerCase() as my input strings were in ALL CAPS which didn't have the non-hump portions lowercased properly. Using just this returns the string object itself, which is actually an array of char, hence the TypeError mentioned above.
This returns the exact opposite of what's needed. This'll return sTRING.
i
ismnoiet

You can use this solution :

function toCamelCase(str){
  return str.split(' ').map(function(word,index){
    // If it is the first word make sure to lowercase all the chars.
    if(index == 0){
      return word.toLowerCase();
    }
    // If it is not the first word only upper case the first char and lowercase the rest.
    return word.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + word.slice(1).toLowerCase();
  }).join('');
}

This is uppercase, not camel.
Camel case is the first character of every word in a capital case, and toCamelCase function just does that.
You are thinking of PascalCase. CamelCase can be either upper or lower case. In this context, it is often lower case to avoid confusion.
Thanks @Kody ,@cchamberlain for your constructive comment, checkout the updated version.
+1 for not use regular expressions, even if the question asked for a solution using them. This is a much clearer solution, and also a clear win for performance (because processing complex regular expressions is a much harder task than just iterating over a bunch of strings and joining bits of them together). See jsperf.com/camel-casing-regexp-or-character-manipulation/1 where I've taken some of the examples here along with this one (and also my own modest improvement of it for performance, although I would probably prefer this version for clarity's sake in most cases).
F
Fredric

In Scott’s specific case I’d go with something like:

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function() {
    return this.replace(/^([A-Z])|\s(\w)/g, function(match, p1, p2, offset) {
        if (p2) return p2.toUpperCase();
        return p1.toLowerCase();        
    });
};

'EquipmentClass name'.toCamelCase()  // -> equipmentClassName
'Equipment className'.toCamelCase()  // -> equipmentClassName
'equipment class name'.toCamelCase() // -> equipmentClassName
'Equipment Class Name'.toCamelCase() // -> equipmentClassName

The regex will match the first character if it starts with a capital letter, and any alphabetic character following a space, i.e. 2 or 3 times in the specified strings.

By spicing up the regex to /^([A-Z])|[\s-_](\w)/g it will also camelize hyphen and underscore type names.

'hyphen-name-format'.toCamelCase()     // -> hyphenNameFormat
'underscore_name_format'.toCamelCase() // -> underscoreNameFormat

what if there are more than 2,3 hypens or underscores in the string like .data-product-name,.data-product-description,.product-container__actions--price,.photo-placeholder__photo
@AshwaniShukla In order to handle multiple hyphens and/or underscores you will have to add a multiplier (+) to the character group, i.e.: /^([A-Z])|[\s-_]+(\w)/g
v
vitaly-t

Reliable, high-performance example:

function camelize(text) {
    text = text.replace(/[-_\s.]+(.)?/g, (_, c) => c ? c.toUpperCase() : '');
    return text.substring(0, 1).toLowerCase() + text.substring(1);
}

Case-changing characters:

hyphen -

underscore _

period .

space


For people who startout with an UPPERCASED string, first use: text = text.toLowerCase();
.substr is deprecated, use .substring now instead.
E
Eilidh
function toCamelCase(str) {
  // Lower cases the string
  return str.toLowerCase()
    // Replaces any - or _ characters with a space 
    .replace( /[-_]+/g, ' ')
    // Removes any non alphanumeric characters 
    .replace( /[^\w\s]/g, '')
    // Uppercases the first character in each group immediately following a space 
    // (delimited by spaces) 
    .replace( / (.)/g, function($1) { return $1.toUpperCase(); })
    // Removes spaces 
    .replace( / /g, '' );
}

I was trying to find a JavaScript function to camelCase a string, and wanted to make sure special characters would be removed (and I had trouble understanding what some of the answers above were doing). This is based on c c young's answer, with added comments and the removal of $peci&l characters.


a
azatoth

If regexp isn't required, you might want to look at following code I made a long time ago for Twinkle:

String.prototype.toUpperCaseFirstChar = function() {
    return this.substr( 0, 1 ).toUpperCase() + this.substr( 1 );
}

String.prototype.toLowerCaseFirstChar = function() {
    return this.substr( 0, 1 ).toLowerCase() + this.substr( 1 );
}

String.prototype.toUpperCaseEachWord = function( delim ) {
    delim = delim ? delim : ' ';
    return this.split( delim ).map( function(v) { return v.toUpperCaseFirstChar() } ).join( delim );
}

String.prototype.toLowerCaseEachWord = function( delim ) {
    delim = delim ? delim : ' ';
    return this.split( delim ).map( function(v) { return v.toLowerCaseFirstChar() } ).join( delim );
}

I haven't made any performance tests, and regexp versions might or might not be faster.


5x times faster on average, if you only need 1 word jsbin.com/wuvagenoka/edit?html,js,output
e
eledgaar

My ES6 approach:

const camelCase = str => {
  let string = str.toLowerCase().replace(/[^A-Za-z0-9]/g, ' ').split(' ')
                  .reduce((result, word) => result + capitalize(word.toLowerCase()))
  return string.charAt(0).toLowerCase() + string.slice(1)
}

const capitalize = str => str.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + str.toLowerCase().slice(1)

let baz = 'foo bar'
let camel = camelCase(baz)
console.log(camel)  // "fooBar"
camelCase('foo bar')  // "fooBar"
camelCase('FOO BAR')  // "fooBar"
camelCase('x nN foo bar')  // "xNnFooBar"
camelCase('!--foo-¿?-bar--121-**%')  // "fooBar121"

what about names like Jean-Pierre ?
M
Martin Szyska

Here is a one liner doing the work:

const camelCaseIt = string => string.toLowerCase().trim().split(/[.\-_\s]/g).reduce((string, word) => string + word[0].toUpperCase() + word.slice(1));

It splits the lower-cased string based on the list of characters provided in the RegExp [.\-_\s] (add more inside the []!) and returns a word array . Then, it reduces the array of strings to one concatenated string of words with uppercased first letters. Because the reduce has no initial value, it will start uppercasing first letters starting with the second word.

If you want PascalCase, just add an initial empty string ,'') to the reduce method.


P
Pascal Tovohery

This function by pass cammelcase such these tests

Foo Bar

--foo-bar--

__FOO_BAR__-

foo123Bar

foo_Bar

function toCamelCase(str) { var arr= str.match(/[a-z]+|\d+/gi); return arr.map((m,i)=>{ let low = m.toLowerCase(); if (i!=0){ low = low.split('').map((s,k)=>k==0?s.toUpperCase():s).join`` } return low; }).join``; } console.log(toCamelCase('Foo Bar')); console.log(toCamelCase('--foo-bar--')); console.log(toCamelCase('__FOO_BAR__-')); console.log(toCamelCase('foo123Bar')); console.log(toCamelCase('foo_Bar')); console.log(toCamelCase('EquipmentClass name')); console.log(toCamelCase('Equipment className')); console.log(toCamelCase('equipment class name')); console.log(toCamelCase('Equipment Class Name'));


Algorithm-based camel-case transformation is a huge overkill and a performance hog.
J
Jeff Huijsmans

lodash can do the trick sure and well:

var _ = require('lodash');
var result = _.camelCase('toto-ce héros') 
// result now contains "totoCeHeros"

Although lodash may be a "big" library (~4kB), it contains a lot of functions that you'd normally use a snippet for, or build yourself.


there are npm modules with each individual lodashfunction, so you don't need to import all the"big" library: npmjs.com/package/lodash.camelcase
k
kohloth

The top answer is terse but it doesn't handle all edge cases. For anyone needing a more robust utility, without any external dependencies:

function camelCase(str) {
    return (str.slice(0, 1).toLowerCase() + str.slice(1))
      .replace(/([-_ ]){1,}/g, ' ')
      .split(/[-_ ]/)
      .reduce((cur, acc) => {
        return cur + acc[0].toUpperCase() + acc.substring(1);
      });
}

function sepCase(str, sep = '-') {
    return str
      .replace(/[A-Z]/g, (letter, index) => {
        const lcLet = letter.toLowerCase();
        return index ? sep + lcLet : lcLet;
      })
      .replace(/([-_ ]){1,}/g, sep)
}

// All will return 'fooBarBaz'
console.log(camelCase('foo_bar_baz'))
console.log(camelCase('foo-bar-baz'))
console.log(camelCase('foo_bar--baz'))
console.log(camelCase('FooBar  Baz'))
console.log(camelCase('FooBarBaz'))
console.log(camelCase('fooBarBaz'))

// All will return 'foo-bar-baz'
console.log(sepCase('fooBarBaz'));
console.log(sepCase('FooBarBaz'));
console.log(sepCase('foo-bar-baz'));
console.log(sepCase('foo_bar_baz'));
console.log(sepCase('foo___ bar -baz'));
console.log(sepCase('foo-bar-baz'));

// All will return 'foo__bar__baz'
console.log(sepCase('fooBarBaz', '__'));
console.log(sepCase('foo-bar-baz', '__'));

Demo here: https://codesandbox.io/embed/admiring-field-dnm4r?fontsize=14&hidenavigation=1&theme=dark


What about the first character?
@M_droid I don't understand.
J
Judzhin Miles
return "hello world".toLowerCase().replace(/(?:(^.)|(\s+.))/g, function(match) {
    return match.charAt(match.length-1).toUpperCase();
}); // HelloWorld

d
dx_over_dt

Because this question needed yet another answer...

I tried several of the previous solutions, and all of them had one flaw or another. Some didn't remove punctuation; some didn't handle cases with numbers; some didn't handle multiple punctuations in a row.

None of them handled a string like a1 2b. There's no explicitly defined convention for this case, but some other stackoverflow questions suggested separating the numbers with an underscore.

I doubt this is the most performant answer (three regex passes through the string, rather than one or two), but it passes all the tests I can think of. To be honest, though, I really can't imagine a case where you're doing so many camel-case conversions that performance would matter.

(I added this as an npm package. It also includes an optional boolean parameter to return Pascal Case instead of Camel Case.)

const underscoreRegex = /(?:[^\w\s]|_)+/g,
    sandwichNumberRegex = /(\d)\s+(?=\d)/g,
    camelCaseRegex = /(?:^\s*\w|\b\w|\W+)/g;

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function() {
    if (/^\s*_[\s_]*$/g.test(this)) {
        return '_';
    }

    return this.replace(underscoreRegex, ' ')
        .replace(sandwichNumberRegex, '$1_')
        .replace(camelCaseRegex, function(match, index) {
            if (/^\W+$/.test(match)) {
                return '';
            }

            return index == 0 ? match.trimLeft().toLowerCase() : match.toUpperCase();
        });
}

Test cases (Jest)

test('Basic strings', () => {
    expect(''.toCamelCase()).toBe('');
    expect('A B C'.toCamelCase()).toBe('aBC');
    expect('aB c'.toCamelCase()).toBe('aBC');
    expect('abc      def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abcDef');
    expect('abc__ _ _def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abcDef');
    expect('abc__ _ d_ e _ _fg'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abcDEFg');
});

test('Basic strings with punctuation', () => {
    expect(`a'b--d -- f.h`.toCamelCase()).toBe('aBDFH');
    expect(`...a...def`.toCamelCase()).toBe('aDef');
});

test('Strings with numbers', () => {
    expect('12 3 4 5'.toCamelCase()).toBe('12_3_4_5');
    expect('12 3 abc'.toCamelCase()).toBe('12_3Abc');
    expect('ab2c'.toCamelCase()).toBe('ab2c');
    expect('1abc'.toCamelCase()).toBe('1abc');
    expect('1Abc'.toCamelCase()).toBe('1Abc');
    expect('abc 2def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abc2def');
    expect('abc-2def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abc2def');
    expect('abc_2def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abc2def');
    expect('abc1_2def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abc1_2def');
    expect('abc1 2def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abc1_2def');
    expect('abc1 2   3def'.toCamelCase()).toBe('abc1_2_3def');
});

test('Oddball cases', () => {
    expect('_'.toCamelCase()).toBe('_');
    expect('__'.toCamelCase()).toBe('_');
    expect('_ _'.toCamelCase()).toBe('_');
    expect('\t_ _\n'.toCamelCase()).toBe('_');
    expect('_a_'.toCamelCase()).toBe('a');
    expect('\''.toCamelCase()).toBe('');
    expect(`\tab\tcd`.toCamelCase()).toBe('abCd');
    expect(`
ab\tcd\r

-_

|'ef`.toCamelCase()).toBe(`abCdEf`);
});

s
sunstory

little modified Scott's answer:

toCamelCase = (string) ->
  string
    .replace /[\s|_|-](.)/g, ($1) -> $1.toUpperCase()
    .replace /[\s|_|-]/g, ''
    .replace /^(.)/, ($1) -> $1.toLowerCase()

now it replaces '-' and '_' too.


M
Mr. Polywhirl

All 14 permutations below produce the same result of "equipmentClassName".

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function() { return this.replace(/[^a-z ]/ig, '') // Replace everything but letters and spaces. .replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w|\s+)/g, // Find non-words, uppercase letters, leading-word letters, and multiple spaces. function(match, index) { return +match === 0 ? "" : match[index === 0 ? 'toLowerCase' : 'toUpperCase'](); }); } String.toCamelCase = function(str) { return str.toCamelCase(); } var testCases = [ "equipment class name", "equipment class Name", "equipment Class name", "equipment Class Name", "Equipment class name", "Equipment class Name", "Equipment Class name", "Equipment Class Name", "equipment className", "equipment ClassName", "Equipment ClassName", "equipmentClass name", "equipmentClass Name", "EquipmentClass Name" ]; for (var i = 0; i < testCases.length; i++) { console.log(testCases[i].toCamelCase()); };


Yeah. I like the use of prototype methods with strings rather than functions. It helps with chaining.
C
Chang Hoon Lee

you can use this solution:

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function(){ return this.replace(/\s(\w)/ig, function(all, letter){return letter.toUpperCase();}) .replace(/(^\w)/, function($1){return $1.toLowerCase()}); }; console.log('Equipment className'.toCamelCase());


This example show you how to use two another function in replace method.
k
kalicki2k

Here's my suggestion:

function toCamelCase(string) {
  return `${string}`
    .replace(new RegExp(/[-_]+/, 'g'), ' ')
    .replace(new RegExp(/[^\w\s]/, 'g'), '')
    .replace(
      new RegExp(/\s+(.)(\w+)/, 'g'),
      ($1, $2, $3) => `${$2.toUpperCase() + $3.toLowerCase()}`
    )
    .replace(new RegExp(/\s/, 'g'), '')
    .replace(new RegExp(/\w/), s => s.toLowerCase());
}

or

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function() {
  return this
    .replace(new RegExp(/[-_]+/, 'g'), ' ')
    .replace(new RegExp(/[^\w\s]/, 'g'), '')
    .replace(
      new RegExp(/\s+(.)(\w+)/, 'g'),
      ($1, $2, $3) => `${$2.toUpperCase() + $3.toLowerCase()}`
    )
    .replace(new RegExp(/\s/, 'g'), '')
    .replace(new RegExp(/\w/), s => s.toLowerCase());
};

Test cases:

describe('String to camel case', function() {
  it('should return a camel cased string', function() {
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('foo bar'), 'fooBar');
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('Foo Bar'), 'fooBar');
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('fooBar'), 'fooBar');
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('FooBar'), 'fooBar');
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('--foo-bar--'), 'fooBar');
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('__FOO_BAR__'), 'fooBar');
    chai.assert.equal(toCamelCase('!--foo-¿?-bar--121-**%'), 'fooBar121');
  });
});

T
TorchedSammy

following @Scott's readable approach, a little bit of fine tuning

// convert any string to camelCase
var toCamelCase = function(str) {
  return str.toLowerCase()
    .replace( /['"]/g, '' )
    .replace( /\W+/g, ' ' )
    .replace( / (.)/g, function($1) { return $1.toUpperCase(); })
    .replace( / /g, '' );
}

Camel transformation can be easily done with 1 replace, not 4.
D
Daniil Khudiakov

There is my solution:

const toCamelWord = (word, idx) => idx === 0 ? word.toLowerCase() : word.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + word.slice(1).toLowerCase(); const toCamelCase = text => text .split(/[_-\s]+/) .map(toCamelWord) .join(""); console.log(toCamelCase('User ID'))


B
Brandon McConnell

To effectively create a function that converts the casing of a string to camel-case, the function will also need to convert each string to lower-case first, before transforming the casing of the first character of non-first strings to an uppercase letter.

My example string is:

"text That I WaNt to make cAMEL case"

Many other solutions provided to this question return this:

"textThatIWaNtToMakeCAMELCase"

What I believe should be the expected, desired output would be this though, where all the mid-string uppercase characters are first transformed to be lowercase:

"textThatIWanrtToMakeCamelCase"

This can be done WITHOUT using any replace() method calls, by utilizing the String.prototype.split(), Array.prototype.map(), and Array.prototype.join() methods:

≤ ES5 Version

function makeCamelCase(str) {
  return str
    .split(' ')
    .map((e,i) => i
      ? e.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + e.slice(1).toLowerCase()
      : e.toLowerCase()
    )
    .join('')
}

makeCamelCase("text That I WaNt to make cAMEL case")
// -> "textThatIWanrtToMakeCamelCase" ✅

I'll break down what each line does, and then provide the same solution in two other formats— ES6 and as a String.prototype method, though I'd advise against extending built-in JavaScript prototypes directly like this.

Explainer

function makeCamelCase(str) {
  return str
    // split string into array of different words by splitting at spaces
    .split(' ')
    // map array of words into two different cases, one for the first word (`i == false`) and one for all other words in the array (where `i == true`). `i` is a parameter that denotes the current index of the array item being evaluated. Because indexes start at `0` and `0` is a "falsy" value, we can use the false/else case of this ternary expression to match the first string where `i === 0`.
    .map((e,i) => i
      // for all non-first words, use a capitalized form of the first character + the lowercase version of the rest of the word (excluding the first character using the slice() method)
      ? e.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + e.slice(1).toLowerCase()
      // for the first word, we convert the entire word to lowercase
      : e.toLowerCase()
    )
    // finally, we join the different strings back together into a single string without spaces, our camel-cased string
    .join('')
}

makeCamelCase("text That I WaNt to make cAMEL case")
// -> "textThatIWanrtToMakeCamelCase" ✅

Condensed ES6+ (One-Liner) Version

const makeCamelCase = str => str.split(' ').map((e,i) => i ? e.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + e.slice(1).toLowerCase() : e.toLowerCase()).join('')

makeCamelCase("text That I WaNt to make cAMEL case")
// -> "textThatIWanrtToMakeCamelCase" ✅

String.prototype method version

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function() {
  return this
    .split(' ')
    .map((e,i) => i
      ? e.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + e.slice(1).toLowerCase()
      : e.toLowerCase()
    )
    .join('')
}

"text That I WaNt to make cAMEL case".toCamelCase()
// -> "textThatIWanrtToMakeCamelCase" ✅

T
Thieu

This method seems to outperform most answers on here, it's a little bit hacky though, no replaces, no regex, simply building up a new string that's camelCase.

String.prototype.camelCase = function(){
    var newString = '';
    var lastEditedIndex;
    for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++){
        if(this[i] == ' ' || this[i] == '-' || this[i] == '_'){
            newString += this[i+1].toUpperCase();
            lastEditedIndex = i+1;
        }
        else if(lastEditedIndex !== i) newString += this[i].toLowerCase();
    }
    return newString;
}

w
wheeler

This builds on the answer by CMS by removing any non-alphabetic characters including underscores, which \w does not remove.

function toLowerCamelCase(str) {
    return str.replace(/[^A-Za-z0-9]/g, ' ').replace(/^\w|[A-Z]|\b\w|\s+/g, function (match, index) {
        if (+match === 0 || match === '-' || match === '.' ) {
            return ""; // or if (/\s+/.test(match)) for white spaces
        }
        return index === 0 ? match.toLowerCase() : match.toUpperCase();
    });
}

toLowerCamelCase("EquipmentClass name");
toLowerCamelCase("Equipment className");
toLowerCamelCase("equipment class name");
toLowerCamelCase("Equipment Class Name");
toLowerCamelCase("Equipment-Class-Name");
toLowerCamelCase("Equipment_Class_Name");
toLowerCamelCase("Equipment.Class.Name");
toLowerCamelCase("Equipment/Class/Name");
// All output e

C
Christoph Bühler

Upper camel case ("TestString") to lower camel case ("testString") without using regex (let's face it, regex is evil):

'TestString'.split('').reduce((t, v, k) => t + (k === 0 ? v.toLowerCase() : v), '');

Single character parameters are still slightly evil in terms of readability
b
bjornl

I ended up crafting a slightly more aggressive solution:

function toCamelCase(str) {
  const [first, ...acc] = str.replace(/[^\w\d]/g, ' ').split(/\s+/);
  return first.toLowerCase() + acc.map(x => x.charAt(0).toUpperCase() 
    + x.slice(1).toLowerCase()).join('');
}

This one, above, will remove all non-alphanumeric characters and lowercase parts of words that would otherwise remain uppercased, e.g.

Size (comparative) => sizeComparative

GDP (official exchange rate) => gdpOfficialExchangeRate

hello => hello


j
jhenderson2099
function convertStringToCamelCase(str){
    return str.split(' ').map(function(item, index){
        return index !== 0 
            ? item.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + item.substr(1) 
            : item.charAt(0).toLowerCase() + item.substr(1);
    }).join('');
}      

S
Sampgun

I know this is an old answer, but this handles both whitespace and _ (lodash)

function toCamelCase(s){
    return s
          .replace(/_/g, " ")
          .replace(/\s(.)/g, function($1) { return $1.toUpperCase(); })
          .replace(/\s/g, '')
          .replace(/^(.)/, function($1) { return $1.toLowerCase(); });
}

console.log(toCamelCase("Hello world");
console.log(toCamelCase("Hello_world");

// Both print "helloWorld"

Thanks for this, but there appears to be a stray " in .replace(/_/g", " ") that causes compilation errors?
G
Gaurav Mogha
const toCamelCase = str =>
  str
    .replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+(.)/g, (m, chr) => chr.toUpperCase())
    .replace(/^\w/, c => c.toLowerCase());