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I have a DetailsView with a TextBox and I want the input data be saved always with the first letter in capital.

Example:

"red" --> "Red"
"red house" --> " Red house"

How can I achieve this maximizing performance?


Note:

Based on the answers and the comments under the answers, many people think this is asking about capitalizing all words in the string. E.g. => Red House It isn't, but if that is what you seek, look for one of the answers that uses TextInfo's ToTitleCase method. (Note: Those answers are incorrect for the question actually asked.) See TextInfo.ToTitleCase documentation for caveats (doesn't touch all-caps words - they are considered acronyms; may lowercase letters in middle of words that "shouldn't" be lowered, e.g., "McDonald" → "Mcdonald"; not guaranteed to handle all culture-specific subtleties re capitalization rules.)


Note:

The question is ambiguous as to whether letters after the first should be forced to lower case. The accepted answer assumes that only the first letter should be altered. If you want to force all letters in the string except the first to be lower case, look for an answer containing ToLower, and not containing ToTitleCase.

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  • 10
    @Bobby: It's not a duplicate: the OP asks to capitalize the first letter of a string, the question in the link capitalizes the first letter of each word.
    – GvS
    Nov 9, 2010 at 16:31
  • 2
    @GvS: The first answer is very detailed and the first code-block is exactly what he is looking for. Also, between capitalising every word and only the first word is just one loop difference.
    – Bobby
    Nov 9, 2010 at 17:23
  • 2
    But you said, and I quote, "Make first letter of EACH WORD upper case". Therefore, why "red house" --> " Red house"? Why the "h" of "house" is not a capital letter? Oct 30, 2012 at 20:02
  • don't forget assuming you're using a computer, you can do this: stackoverflow.com/a/1206029/294884
    – Fattie
    Feb 11, 2016 at 0:18
  • @Fattie - Useful link, However this question is not about capitalizing each word - it is about changing only the first letter of the string to a capital. Apr 10, 2017 at 18:22

45 Answers 45

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2
0

The key is to avoid string manipulations. Because string is immutable any manipulation results in a new copy.

Working on arrays is usually fast. Using Span<T>also allows for some improved memory management especially when passing and processing the string. The string should stay as long as possible a Span<T>. In other words, whenever possible, replace string with ReadOnlySpan<T> or Span<T>.

For example, define parameters as ReadOnlySpan<char> instead of string. Changing method parameters won't break the API as there is an implicit cast from string to ReadOnlySpan<char>. Whlie it doesn't break the API, it will improve the performance:

public static void Main()
{
  string someText = "Some text";

  // string is converted to ReadOnlySpan<char> implicitly
  ImplicitCastExample(someText); 
}

private static void ImplicitCastExample(ReadOnlySpan<char> stringContent)
{ 
  // Convert the span back to a string when necessary
  string stringValue = strngContent.ToString();
}

Implementation

The example requires .Net Standard 2.1, .NET Core 2.1 or .NET (in order to support the implicit cast from string to ReadOnlySpan<T>).

public static class StringHelper
{
  public static ReadOnlySpan<char> ToUpper(this string stringValue, int index)
  {
    Span<char> stringContent = stringValue.ToCharArray();
    stringContent[index] = char.ToUpper(stringContent[index]);
    return stringContent;
  }

  public static ReadOnlySpan<char> ToUpper(this ReadOnlySpan<char> stringValue, int index)
  {
    Span<char> stringContent = stringValue.ToArray();
    stringContent[index] = char.ToUpper(stringContent[index]);
    return stringContent;
  }

  public static void ToUpper(this Span<char> stringContent, int index)
    => stringContent[index] = char.ToUpper(stringContent[index]);
}

Usage example

string someText = "Some text";

// Capitalize the first character
ReadOnlySpan<char> capitalizedStringContent = someText.ToUpper(0);

// Capitalize the first character
ReadOnlySpan<char> stringContent = 
ReadOnlySpan<char> capitalizedStringContent = someText.ToUpper(0);

// Use ReadOnlySpan<char> (or Span<T>) as long as possible
// e.g. for manipulations, parsing or as method arguments
// to avoid creation of numerous string copies.
Span<char> replacedStringContent = new Span<char>();
capitalizedString.Replace(replacedStringContent, 'o', 'a');
      
// Finalize to string
replacedStringContent.ToString(); // "Same text"
-1

Recently I had a similar requirement and remembered that the LINQ function Select() provides an index:

string input;
string output;

input = "red house";
output = String.Concat(input.Select((currentChar, index) => index == 0 ? Char.ToUpper(currentChar) : currentChar));
//output = "Red house"

Since I need that very often I made an extension method for the string type:

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string FirstLetterToUpper(this string input)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(input))
            return string.Empty;
        return String.Concat(input.Select((currentChar, index) => index == 0 ? Char.ToUpper(currentChar) : currentChar));
    }
}

Please note that only the first letter is converted to upper case - all remaining characters are not touched. If you need the other characters to be lower case you may also call Char.ToLower(currentChar) for index > 0 or call ToLower() on the whole string in the first place.

Regarding performance I compared the code with the solution from Darren. On my machine Darren's code is about two times faster which is no surprise since he's directly editing only the first letter within a char array.

So I suggest you take Darren's code if you need the fastest solution available. If you want to integrate other string manipulations as well it may be convenient to have the expressive power of a lambda function touching the characters of the input string - you can easily extend this function - so I leave this solution here.

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  • 1
    I was wondering how I would solve this problem, worked out my own solution, then came back to post it only to find you had come up with the exact same solution I had already. +1 to you! Jan 9, 2020 at 15:18
-1

This also works, using Take, Skip and Aggregate:

    public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string text) 
    {
      if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(text)) return String.Empty;
      var first = text.Take(1).ToArray()[0].ToString().ToUpper();
      var rest = text.Skip(1).Aggregate("", ((xs, x) => xs + x));
      return first + rest;
    }
-1

Too late for the party, but either way, here is my 2 cents:

static string ToTitleCase(string str)
    => string.Concat((char)(str[0] & 0xDF), str[1..]);
-1

in addition to @Carlos Muñoz I'd say

public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string input) =>
   input switch
   {
      string s when string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(s) => throw new ArgumentException($"{nameof(input)} cannot be null, empty or whitespace", nameof(input)),
      _ => string.Concat(input[0].ToString().ToUpper(), input.AsSpan(1))
   };
-2

The easiest way to capitalize the first letter is:

  1. Using System.Globalization;

     // Creates a TextInfo based on the "en-US" culture.
     TextInfo myTI = new CultureInfo("en-US", false).
    
     myTI.ToTitleCase(textboxname.Text)
    
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  • 4
    This answer is essentially identical to answers given years earlier. It adds nothing to discussion. Apr 10, 2017 at 19:38
  • 3
    It is also wrong, just like the comment in the other one, this turns every first letter in all words capital not i.e. Red House instead of Red house. Oct 12, 2017 at 18:06
-2

This capitalizes the first letter and every letter following a space and lower cases any other letter.

public string CapitalizeFirstLetterAfterSpace(string input)
{
    System.Text.StringBuilder sb = new System.Text.StringBuilder(input);
    bool capitalizeNextLetter = true;
    for(int pos = 0; pos < sb.Length; pos++)
    {
        if(capitalizeNextLetter)
        {
            sb[pos]=System.Char.ToUpper(sb[pos]);
            capitalizeNextLetter = false;
        }
        else
        {
            sb[pos]=System.Char.ToLower(sb[pos]);
        }

        if(sb[pos]=' ')
        {
            capitalizeNextLetter=true;
        }
    }
}
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  • 2
    Or if you don't want to write walls of code - CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(theString); does the same thing.
    – CatDadCode
    Nov 9, 2010 at 15:48
  • Yeah... I didn't know about that :) And due to my massive amount of code, everyone else's answers popped up while I was still typing. Nov 9, 2010 at 15:51
  • 1
    UPVOTED: 1) A slight difference between this answer and ToTitleCase, is that this answer forces words that are all caps to become TitleCase, whereas ToTitleCase leaves such words alone (assumes they might be acronyms). This might or might not be what is desired. An advantage of having a code example like this, is that it can be modified as desired. 2) this won't handle white space other than ' ' correctly. should replace blank test with white space test. Apr 12, 2017 at 0:06
-2

Use the following code:

string strtest ="PRASHANT";
strtest.First().ToString().ToUpper() + strtest.Remove(0, 1).ToLower();
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  • 1
    Its not even worth a point to my rep to downvote this answer added years later, that is obviously equivalent to already existing answers. If you are going to add a new answer to a question with many answers, please explain what you believe is superior about your answer, or under what circumstances your answer would be more useful than other answers. Be specific. Apr 10, 2017 at 20:10
-4
string input = "red HOUSE";
System.Text.StringBuilder sb = new System.Text.StringBuilder(input);

for (int j = 0; j < sb.Length; j++)
{
    if ( j == 0 ) //catches just the first letter
        sb[j] = System.Char.ToUpper(sb[j]);
    else  //everything else is lower case
        sb[j] = System.Char.ToLower(sb[j]);
}
// Store the new string.
string corrected = sb.ToString();
System.Console.WriteLine(corrected);
-4

As BobBeechey suggests in his response to this question, the following code will work for this:

private void txt_fname_TextChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    char[] c = txt_fname.Text.ToCharArray();
    int j;
    for (j = 0; j < txt_fname.Text.Length; j++)
    {
        if (j==0) c[j]=c[j].ToString().ToUpper()[0];
        else c[j] = c[j].ToString().ToLower()[0];
    }
    txt_fname.Text = new string(c); 
    txt_fname.Select(txt_fname.Text.Length, 1);
}
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  • Please explain how you believe this to be an improvement over answers already posted, years earlier. Apr 10, 2017 at 20:09
  • 3
    .. upon further review, this is a poor answer. 1) c[j].ToString().ToUpper()[0] is an inefficient way to do char.ToUpper(c[j]). 2) There is other clutter and minor inefficiencies - which wouldn't bother me if this was written at the time the question was posted. But if you are going to add an answer later, please make sure it is high quality, and a novel approach, not already covered by existing answers. Apr 12, 2017 at 0:43
-4

With this method you can upper the first character of every word.

Example

"HeLlo wOrld" => "Hello World"

public static string FirstCharToUpper(string input)
{
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(input))
        throw new ArgumentException("Error");
    return string.Join(" ", input.Split(' ').Select(d => d.First().ToString().ToUpper() +  d.ToLower().Substring(1)));
}
-4

I use this to correct names. It basically works on the concept of changing a character to uppercase if it follows a specific pattern. In this case I've gone for space and dash of "Mc".

private String CorrectName(String name)
{
    List<String> StringsToCapitalizeAfter = new List<String>() { " ", "-", "Mc" };
    StringBuilder NameBuilder = new StringBuilder();
    name.Select(c => c.ToString()).ToList().ForEach(c =>
    {
        c = c.ToLower();
        StringsToCapitalizeAfter.ForEach(s =>
        {
            if(String.IsNullOrEmpty(NameBuilder.ToString()) ||
               NameBuilder.ToString().EndsWith(s))
            {
                c = c.ToUpper();
            }
        });
        NameBuilder.Append(c);
    });
    return NameBuilder.ToString();
}
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  • What about white space other than the space character? Apr 12, 2017 at 0:09
-6
 private string capitalizeFirstCharacter(string format)
 {
     if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(format))
         return string.Empty;
     else
         return char.ToUpper(format[0]) + format.ToLower().Substring(1);
 }
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  • 3
    Welcome to StackOverflow. While sometimes posting code is useful, it's better to include a commentary on what the code does and how it answers the question.
    – wjl
    Feb 25, 2015 at 18:15
  • 4
    This does capitalize the first character, but also un-capitalize the rest of the text, which probably isn't the desired effect.
    – caiosm1005
    Mar 31, 2016 at 14:05
  • 4
    Its also equivalent to answers posted years earlier, so in no case does it constribute to the discussion. Apr 10, 2017 at 20:07
-7
string s_Val = "test";
if (s_Val != "")
{
   s_Val  = char.ToUpper(s_Val[0]);
   if (s_Val.Length > 1)
   {
      s_Val += s_Val.Substring(1);
   }
 }
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  • 5
    What if the string is only 0 or 1 character long?
    – GvS
    Nov 9, 2010 at 15:33
  • 6
    This is just wrong. Firstly it wont compile as you are trying to write a char back into the original string. Secondly if you add ToString to line 4 to make it compile the result is always just the first char as a capital and lines 5-8 become unreachable code.
    – CeejeeB
    Jan 21, 2015 at 10:31
-7

The simplest and fastest way is to replace the first character of the string by making it an upper case character:

string str = "test";<br>
str = str.Replace(str[0], char.ToUpper(str[0]));
1
  • This answer is wrong because it blindly updates any instance of the first letter. "red horse" becomes "Red hoRse"
    – Marie
    Nov 12, 2019 at 17:49
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