I have a string which contains words in a mixture of upper and lower case characters.
For example: string myData = "a Simple string";
I need to convert the first character of each word (separated by spaces) into upper case. So I want the result as: string myData ="A Simple String";
Is there any easy way to do this? I don't want to split the string and do the conversion (that will be my last resort). Also, it is guaranteed that the strings are in English.
MSDN : TextInfo.ToTitleCase
Make sure that you include: using System.Globalization
string title = "war and peace";
TextInfo textInfo = new CultureInfo("en-US", false).TextInfo;
title = textInfo.ToTitleCase(title);
Console.WriteLine(title) ; //War And Peace
//When text is ALL UPPERCASE...
title = "WAR AND PEACE" ;
title = textInfo.ToTitleCase(title);
Console.WriteLine(title) ; //WAR AND PEACE
//You need to call ToLower to make it work
title = textInfo.ToTitleCase(title.ToLower());
Console.WriteLine(title) ; //War And Peace
Try this:
string myText = "a Simple string";
string asTitleCase =
System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.
ToTitleCase(myText.ToLower());
As has already been pointed out, using TextInfo.ToTitleCase might not give you the exact results you want. If you need more control over the output, you could do something like this:
IEnumerable<char> CharsToTitleCase(string s)
{
bool newWord = true;
foreach(char c in s)
{
if(newWord) { yield return Char.ToUpper(c); newWord = false; }
else yield return Char.ToLower(c);
if(c==' ') newWord = true;
}
}
And then use it like so:
var asTitleCase = new string( CharsToTitleCase(myText).ToArray() );
Yet another variation. Based on several tips here I've reduced it to this extension method, which works great for my purposes:
public static string ToTitleCase(this string s) =>
CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(s.ToLower());
Personally I tried the TextInfo.ToTitleCase
method, but, I don´t understand why it doesn´t work when all chars are upper-cased.
Though I like the util function provided by Winston Smith, let me provide the function I'm currently using:
public static String TitleCaseString(String s)
{
if (s == null) return s;
String[] words = s.Split(' ');
for (int i = 0; i < words.Length; i++)
{
if (words[i].Length == 0) continue;
Char firstChar = Char.ToUpper(words[i][0]);
String rest = "";
if (words[i].Length > 1)
{
rest = words[i].Substring(1).ToLower();
}
words[i] = firstChar + rest;
}
return String.Join(" ", words);
}
Playing with some tests strings:
String ts1 = "Converting string to title case in C#";
String ts2 = "C";
String ts3 = "";
String ts4 = " ";
String ts5 = null;
Console.Out.WriteLine(String.Format("|{0}|", TitleCaseString(ts1)));
Console.Out.WriteLine(String.Format("|{0}|", TitleCaseString(ts2)));
Console.Out.WriteLine(String.Format("|{0}|", TitleCaseString(ts3)));
Console.Out.WriteLine(String.Format("|{0}|", TitleCaseString(ts4)));
Console.Out.WriteLine(String.Format("|{0}|", TitleCaseString(ts5)));
Giving output:
|Converting String To Title Case In C#|
|C|
||
| |
||
ToLower()
on the entire string, you'd rather do all of that work yourself and call the same function on each individual character? Not only is it an ugly solution, it is giving zero benefit, and would even take longer than the built-in function.
rest = words[i].Substring(1).ToLower();
Recently I found a better solution.
If your text contains every letter in uppercase, then TextInfo will not convert it to the proper case. We can fix that by using the lowercase function inside like this:
public static string ConvertTo_ProperCase(string text)
{
TextInfo myTI = new CultureInfo("en-US", false).TextInfo;
return myTI.ToTitleCase(text.ToLower());
}
Now this will convert everything that comes in to Propercase.
public static string PropCase(string strText)
{
return new CultureInfo("en").TextInfo.ToTitleCase(strText.ToLower());
}
Use ToLower()
first, and then CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase
on the result to get the correct output.
//---------------------------------------------------------------
// Get title case of a string (every word with leading upper case,
// the rest is lower case)
// i.e: ABCD EFG -> Abcd Efg,
// john doe -> John Doe,
// miXEd CaSING - > Mixed Casing
//---------------------------------------------------------------
public static string ToTitleCase(string str)
{
return CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(str.ToLower());
}
If someone is interested for the solution for Compact Framework :
return String.Join(" ", thestring.Split(' ').Select(i => i.Substring(0, 1).ToUpper() + i.Substring(1).ToLower()).ToArray());
Here's the solution for that problem...
CultureInfo cultureInfo = Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
TextInfo textInfo = cultureInfo.TextInfo;
string txt = textInfo.ToTitleCase(txt);
I needed a way to deal with all caps words, and I liked Ricky AH's solution, but I took it a step further to implement it as an extension method. This avoids the step of having to create your array of chars then call ToArray on it explicitly every time - so you can just call it on the string, like so:
usage:
string newString = oldString.ToProper();
code:
public static class StringExtensions
{
public static string ToProper(this string s)
{
return new string(s.CharsToTitleCase().ToArray());
}
public static IEnumerable<char> CharsToTitleCase(this string s)
{
bool newWord = true;
foreach (char c in s)
{
if (newWord) { yield return Char.ToUpper(c); newWord = false; }
else yield return Char.ToLower(c);
if (c == ' ') newWord = true;
}
}
}
Its better to understand by trying your own code...
Read more
http://www.stupidcodes.com/2014/04/convert-string-to-uppercase-proper-case.html
1) Convert a String to Uppercase
string lower = "converted from lowercase";
Console.WriteLine(lower.ToUpper());
2) Convert a String to Lowercase
string upper = "CONVERTED FROM UPPERCASE";
Console.WriteLine(upper.ToLower());
3) Convert a String to TitleCase
CultureInfo cultureInfo = Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
TextInfo textInfo = cultureInfo.TextInfo;
string txt = textInfo.ToTitleCase(TextBox1.Text());
I used the above references and a complete solution is:
Use Namespace System.Globalization;
string str = "INFOA2Z means all information";
// Need result like "Infoa2z Means All Information" // We need to convert the string in lowercase also, otherwise it is not working properly.
TextInfo ProperCase = new CultureInfo("en-US", false).TextInfo;
str = ProperCase.ToTitleCase(str.toLower());
Change string to proper case in an ASP.NET Using C#
String TitleCaseString(String s)
{
if (s == null || s.Length == 0) return s;
string[] splits = s.Split(' ');
for (int i = 0; i < splits.Length; i++)
{
switch (splits[i].Length)
{
case 1:
break;
default:
splits[i] = Char.ToUpper(splits[i][0]) + splits[i].Substring(1);
break;
}
}
return String.Join(" ", splits);
}
Without using TextInfo
:
public static string TitleCase(this string text, char seperator = ' ') =>
string.Join(seperator, text.Split(seperator).Select(word => new string(
word.Select((letter, i) => i == 0 ? char.ToUpper(letter) : char.ToLower(letter)).ToArray())));
It loops through every letter in each word, converting it to uppercase if it's the first letter otherwise converting it to lowercase.
You can directly change text or string to proper using this simple method, after checking for null or empty string values in order to eliminate errors:
// Text to proper (Title Case):
public string TextToProper(string text)
{
string ProperText = string.Empty;
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(text))
{
ProperText = CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(text);
}
else
{
ProperText = string.Empty;
}
return ProperText;
}
Alternative with reference to Microsoft.VisualBasic
(handles uppercase strings too):
string properCase = Strings.StrConv(str, VbStrConv.ProperCase);
Here is an implementation, character by character. It should work with "(One Two Three)":
public static string ToInitcap(this string str)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(str))
return str;
char[] charArray = new char[str.Length];
bool newWord = true;
for (int i = 0; i < str.Length; ++i)
{
Char currentChar = str[i];
if (Char.IsLetter(currentChar))
{
if (newWord)
{
newWord = false;
currentChar = Char.ToUpper(currentChar);
}
else
{
currentChar = Char.ToLower(currentChar);
}
}
else if (Char.IsWhiteSpace(currentChar))
{
newWord = true;
}
charArray[i] = currentChar;
}
return new string(charArray);
}
Try this:
using System.Globalization;
using System.Threading;
public void ToTitleCase(TextBox TextBoxName)
{
int TextLength = TextBoxName.Text.Length;
if (TextLength == 1)
{
CultureInfo cultureInfo = Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
TextInfo textInfo = cultureInfo.TextInfo;
TextBoxName.Text = textInfo.ToTitleCase(TextBoxName.Text);
TextBoxName.SelectionStart = 1;
}
else if (TextLength > 1 && TextBoxName.SelectionStart < TextLength)
{
int x = TextBoxName.SelectionStart;
CultureInfo cultureInfo = Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
TextInfo textInfo = cultureInfo.TextInfo;
TextBoxName.Text = textInfo.ToTitleCase(TextBoxName.Text);
TextBoxName.SelectionStart = x;
}
else if (TextLength > 1 && TextBoxName.SelectionStart >= TextLength)
{
CultureInfo cultureInfo = Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
TextInfo textInfo = cultureInfo.TextInfo;
TextBoxName.Text = textInfo.ToTitleCase(TextBoxName.Text);
TextBoxName.SelectionStart = TextLength;
}
}
Call this method in the TextChanged event of the TextBox.
This is what I use and it works for most cases unless the user decides to override it by pressing shift or caps lock. Like on Android and iOS keyboards.
Private Class ProperCaseHandler
Private Const wordbreak As String = " ,.1234567890;/\-()#$%^&*€!~+=@"
Private txtProperCase As TextBox
Sub New(txt As TextBox)
txtProperCase = txt
AddHandler txt.KeyPress, AddressOf txtTextKeyDownProperCase
End Sub
Private Sub txtTextKeyDownProperCase(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As Windows.Forms.KeyPressEventArgs)
Try
If Control.IsKeyLocked(Keys.CapsLock) Or Control.ModifierKeys = Keys.Shift Then
Exit Sub
Else
If txtProperCase.TextLength = 0 Then
e.KeyChar = e.KeyChar.ToString.ToUpper()
e.Handled = False
Else
Dim lastChar As String = txtProperCase.Text.Substring(txtProperCase.SelectionStart - 1, 1)
If wordbreak.Contains(lastChar) = True Then
e.KeyChar = e.KeyChar.ToString.ToUpper()
e.Handled = False
End If
End If
End If
Catch ex As Exception
Exit Sub
End Try
End Sub
End Class
As an extension method:
/// <summary>
// Returns a copy of this string converted to `Title Case`.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="value">The string to convert.</param>
/// <returns>The `Title Case` equivalent of the current string.</returns>
public static string ToTitleCase(this string value)
{
string result = string.Empty;
for (int i = 0; i < value.Length; i++)
{
char p = i == 0 ? char.MinValue : value[i - 1];
char c = value[i];
result += char.IsLetter(c) && ((p is ' ') || p is char.MinValue) ? $"{char.ToUpper(c)}" : $"{char.ToLower(c)}";
}
return result;
}
Usage:
"kebab is DELICIOU's ;d c...".ToTitleCase();
Result:
Kebab Is Deliciou's ;d C...
It works fine even with camel case: 'someText in YourPage'
public static class StringExtensions
{
/// <summary>
/// Title case example: 'Some Text In Your Page'.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="text">Support camel and title cases combinations: 'someText in YourPage'</param>
public static string ToTitleCase(this string text)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(text))
{
return text;
}
var result = string.Empty;
var splitedBySpace = text.Split(new[]{ ' ' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
foreach (var sequence in splitedBySpace)
{
// let's check the letters. Sequence can contain even 2 words in camel case
for (var i = 0; i < sequence.Length; i++)
{
var letter = sequence[i].ToString();
// if the letter is Big or it was spaced so this is a start of another word
if (letter == letter.ToUpper() || i == 0)
{
// add a space between words
result += ' ';
}
result += i == 0 ? letter.ToUpper() : letter;
}
}
return result.Trim();
}
}
For the ones who are looking to do it automatically on keypress, I did it with following code in VB.NET on a custom textboxcontrol - you can obviously also do it with a normal textbox - but I like the possibility to add recurring code for specific controls via custom controls it suits the concept of OOP.
Imports System.Windows.Forms
Imports System.Drawing
Imports System.ComponentModel
Public Class MyTextBox
Inherits System.Windows.Forms.TextBox
Private LastKeyIsNotAlpha As Boolean = True
Protected Overrides Sub OnKeyPress(e As KeyPressEventArgs)
If _ProperCasing Then
Dim c As Char = e.KeyChar
If Char.IsLetter(c) Then
If LastKeyIsNotAlpha Then
e.KeyChar = Char.ToUpper(c)
LastKeyIsNotAlpha = False
End If
Else
LastKeyIsNotAlpha = True
End If
End If
MyBase.OnKeyPress(e)
End Sub
Private _ProperCasing As Boolean = False
<Category("Behavior"), Description("When Enabled ensures for automatic proper casing of string"), Browsable(True)>
Public Property ProperCasing As Boolean
Get
Return _ProperCasing
End Get
Set(value As Boolean)
_ProperCasing = value
End Set
End Property
End Class
A way to do it in C:
char proper(char string[])
{
int i = 0;
for(i=0; i<=25; i++)
{
string[i] = tolower(string[i]); // Converts all characters to lower case
if(string[i-1] == ' ') // If the character before is a space
{
string[i] = toupper(string[i]); // Converts characters after spaces to upper case
}
}
string[0] = toupper(string[0]); // Converts the first character to upper case
return 0;
}
Success story sharing
Actual result: "War And Peace"
.text = Regex.Replace(text, @"(?<!\S)\p{Ll}", m => m.Value.ToUpper());
, but it is far from perfect. For example, it still doesn't handle quotes or parentheses -"(one two three)"
->"(one Two Three)"
. You may want to ask a new question after you figure out exactly what you want to do with these cases.