3

I want to take a String input form a user, and format it so that the first letter is capitalized and the rest is not. I would like to do this by splitting the first letter from the string and use .toUpperCase() on it and use .toLowerCase() on the rest, and then merge them back together.

I have an idea, but can't solve everything:

userInput = input.nextLine();
String firstLetter = ???
firstLetter.toUpperCase();
restOfString.toLowerCase();
String merged = firstLetter + restOfString;

This does NOT seem to work:

            name = input.nextLine();
            firstLetter = name.substring(0,1);
            remainingString = name.substring(1);
            firstLetter.toUpperCase();
            remainingString.toLowerCase();
            name = firstLetter + remainingString;
3
  • 1
    As I noted in my answer, you have to assign firstLetter = firstLetter.toUpperCase(); String methods return a new String with the values changed. They don't update the original String.
    – Compass
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:14
  • Oh, i see. Sorry, i missed that! Aand it works! Thank you!! :)
    – Casper TL
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:15
  • This was a duplicate when it was asked yesterday. Probably still is. Oct 23, 2014 at 21:18

2 Answers 2

6

You can use substring.

String firstLetter = userInput.substring(0,1); //takes first letter
String restOfString = userInput.substring(1); //takes rest of sentence
firstLetter = firstLetter.toUpperCase(); //make sure to set the string, the methods return strings, they don't change the string itself
restOfString = restOfString.toLowerCase();
String merged = firstletter + restOfString;

Edit: If you wish to do error-checking on the user's input:

if(userInput.length < 2) {
    throw new InputMismatchException("Sentence too short to properly capitalize!";
}
2
  • Two error checks: The string needs one letter for .substring(0, 1) to work, and it needs two letters for .substring(1) to work. Depending on our specific use, it may not matter.
    – Brian J
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:02
  • @BrianJ I've added error handling as an aside at the end of my answer.
    – Compass
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:05
1

I am guessing you are using Java based on toUpperCase(). What I would suggest you do, is use charAt() to get the first letter, and substring to get the rest.

You can try something like this:

String firstLetter = userInput.substring(0, 1); // Get first element. If you don't understand substring, let me know.
string remainingString = userInput.substring(1); // Grab chars from index 1 to the end.

firstLetter.toUpperCase(); // Capitalize string
remainingString.toLowerCase(); // Lowercase rest of string

String finalString = firstLetter + remainingString;

Hope this helps.

4
  • Thanks, looks very good! I do get 1 error at the "CharAt(0)" though.. Incompatible types: char cannot be converted to java.lang.string - Do you know why? :) do i have to import any packages to do this?
    – Casper TL
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:05
  • @CasperTL no, I think that is my fault. Perhaps char cannot be converted, I will adjust my answer to use substring.
    – AdamMc331
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:11
  • Thanks for your time! i got it to work with the answer by Compass though (via substrings) :)
    – Casper TL
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:17
  • Fair enough, answers are the same. First come first serve I suppose! Feel free to ask if you have any other questions.
    – AdamMc331
    Oct 23, 2014 at 20:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.