629

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.

5
  • 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

44 Answers 44

824

Solution in different C# versions

C# 8 with at least .NET Core 3.0 or .NET Standard 2.1

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string input) =>
        input switch
        {
            null => throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input)),
            "" => throw new ArgumentException($"{nameof(input)} cannot be empty", nameof(input)),
            _ => string.Concat(input[0].ToString().ToUpper(), input.AsSpan(1))
        };
}

Since .NET Core 3.0 / .NET Standard 2.1 String.Concat() supports ReadonlySpan<char> which saves one allocation if we use .AsSpan(1) instead of .Substring(1).

C# 8

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string input) =>
        input switch
        {
            null => throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input)),
            "" => throw new ArgumentException($"{nameof(input)} cannot be empty", nameof(input)),
            _ => input[0].ToString().ToUpper() + input.Substring(1)
        };
}

C# 7

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string input)
    {
        switch (input)
        {
            case null: throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input));
            case "": throw new ArgumentException($"{nameof(input)} cannot be empty", nameof(input));
            default: return input[0].ToString().ToUpper() + input.Substring(1);
        }
    }
}

Really old answers

public static string FirstCharToUpper(string input)
{
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(input))
        throw new ArgumentException("ARGH!");
    return input.First().ToString().ToUpper() + String.Join("", input.Skip(1));
}

This version is shorter. For a faster solution, take a look at Diego's answer.

public static string FirstCharToUpper(string input)
{
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(input))
        throw new ArgumentException("ARGH!");
    return input.First().ToString().ToUpper() + input.Substring(1);
}

Probably the fastest solution is Darren's (There's even a benchmark) although I would change it's string.IsNullOrEmpty(s) validation to throw an exception since the original requirement expects for a first letter to exist so it can be uppercased. Note that this code works for a generic string and not particularly on valid values from the Textbox.

32
  • 2
    Because first parameter of String.Join is separator with which to join strings given with second parameter. Feb 10, 2012 at 16:11
  • 36
    I really like your answer, but var arr = input.ToCharArray(); arr[0] = Char.ToUpperInvariant(arr[0]); return new String(arr); would probably gain some speed since you are creating less immutable objects (and especially you are skipping the String.Join). This of course depends on the length of the string.
    – flindeberg
    Aug 26, 2013 at 14:22
  • 1
    @Gaui, In no place it says remaining letters should be lowercase Apr 23, 2014 at 18:49
  • 13
    Hmmm... Technically, this should return "Argh!" to keep with the Upper Case First Letter rule. ;)
    – user153923
    Apr 24, 2015 at 19:52
  • 2
    @jp2code Since capitalizing a nonexistent first letter in a null or empty string is like getting slapped by a pregnant dolphing, then the ALL CAPS ARGH! is the correct spelling. urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=ARGH&defid=67839 May 4, 2015 at 17:03
401
public string FirstLetterToUpper(string str)
{
    if (str == null)
        return null;

    if (str.Length > 1)
        return char.ToUpper(str[0]) + str.Substring(1);

    return str.ToUpper();
}

this can also be written as

public string ToTitleCase(string str)
{
    var firstword = System.Globalization.CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(str.Split(' ')[0].ToLower());
    str = str.Replace(str.Split(' ')[0],firstword);
    return str;
}

Where it picks up the first word and converts it to title case then replaces it in the input string.

9
  • But this converts every first letter of a word to uppercase, not only the first character of a string.
    – GvS
    Nov 9, 2010 at 15:42
  • @GvS, that's what the question asks you to do. Nov 9, 2010 at 15:45
  • 26
    He asks "red house" => "Red house". ToTitleCase will give you "Red House".
    – GvS
    Nov 9, 2010 at 15:47
  • 1
    @GvS, yes that is why I say that that was my old answer and make every first letter to uppercase
    – Diego
    Nov 9, 2010 at 16:34
  • 1
    Not sure about this but char + string causes a boxing. Just in case max performance is the requirement.
    – nawfal
    Sep 13, 2017 at 4:39
224

The right way is to use Culture:

System.Globalization.CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(word.ToLower())

Note: This will capitalise each word within a string, e.g. "red house" --> "Red House". The solution will also lower-case capitalisation within words, e.g. "old McDonald" --> "Old Mcdonald".

4
  • 28
    Six years after the question was asked, please do a more thorough job of reading existing answers and their comments. If you are convinced you have a better solution, then show the situations in which your answer behaves in a way you think is superior, and specifically how that differs from existing answers. 1) Equiso already covered this option, in second half of his answer. 2) For many situations, ToLower is a mistake, as it wipes out capitalization in middle of word, e.g. "McDonalds". 3) The question is about changing just the first word of the string, not about TitleCase. Apr 10, 2017 at 19:12
  • 2
    Good Culture does not hurt anyway. Other viewers might not have the "only first letter" requirement.
    – JB.
    May 7, 2020 at 9:00
  • A equally correct answer could be word.ToUpper() - it changes the first letter to upper case and we don't bother about the rest. Jul 2, 2020 at 9:08
  • Is "Culture" literal? Jul 12, 2021 at 20:25
94

I took the fastest method from C# Uppercase First Letter - Dot Net Perls and converted to an extension method:

    /// <summary>
    /// Returns the input string with the first character converted to uppercase, or mutates any nulls passed into string.Empty
    /// </summary>
    public static string FirstLetterToUpperCaseOrConvertNullToEmptyString(this string s)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
            return string.Empty;

        char[] a = s.ToCharArray();
        a[0] = char.ToUpper(a[0]);
        return new string(a);
    }

NOTE: The reason using ToCharArray is faster than the alternative char.ToUpper(s[0]) + s.Substring(1), is that only one string is allocated, whereas the Substring approach allocates a string for the substring, and then a second string to compose the final result.


Here is what this approach looks like, combined with the initial test from CarlosMuñoz's accepted answer:

    /// <summary>
    /// Returns the input string with the first character converted to uppercase
    /// </summary>
    public static string FirstLetterToUpperCase(this string s)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
            throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

        char[] a = s.ToCharArray();
        a[0] = char.ToUpper(a[0]);
        return new string(a);
    }
8
  • Wow, thanks for finding performance metrics, to show a superior-performance solution! Apr 10, 2017 at 20:19
  • 2
    @CarlosMuñoz - it has been discussed in meta, whether to "improve" other people's answers. The consensus was "if you can improve an answer, then do so - no one 'owns' an answer, not even the original author - the goal is to have the best possible answers". You are of course free to edit or rollback the edit. In which case, common courtesy would let the original author's version be the final result, and I would settle for commenting. Usually I also put in a comment the change I am making; I apologize if I did not. Apr 11, 2017 at 3:28
  • 1
    Darren, I'm going to edit your answer to add alternative code, that shows what your solution looks like, with @CarlosMuñoz initial test. I believe your contribution was finding a higher performance solution, and that you won't mind this addition. If you don't like it, please do as you see fit with my edit. Apr 11, 2017 at 4:10
  • 1
    @ToolmakerSteve Agree it should ideally not mutate a null to an empty string, but it is handy for my use case so I'll just rename the original method.
    – Darren
    Apr 12, 2017 at 0:45
  • 2
    I benchmarked all the answers and this won. Also changing to char.ToUpperInvariant is even 20% faster Apr 12, 2022 at 18:46
53

You can use the "ToTitleCase method":

string s = new CultureInfo("en-US").TextInfo.ToTitleCase("red house");
//result : Red House

This extension method solves every titlecase problem.

It is easy to use:

string str = "red house";
str.ToTitleCase();
//result : Red house

string str = "red house";
str.ToTitleCase(TitleCase.All);
//result : Red House

The extension method:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Globalization;

namespace Test
{
    public static class StringHelper
    {
        private static CultureInfo ci = new CultureInfo("en-US");
        //Convert all first latter
        public static string ToTitleCase(this string str)
        {
            str = str.ToLower();
            var strArray = str.Split(' ');
            if (strArray.Length > 1)
            {
                strArray[0] = ci.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(strArray[0]);
                return string.Join(" ", strArray);
            }
            return ci.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(str);
        }

        public static string ToTitleCase(this string str, TitleCase tcase)
        {
            str = str.ToLower();
            switch (tcase)
            {
                case TitleCase.First:
                    var strArray = str.Split(' ');
                    if (strArray.Length > 1)
                    {
                        strArray[0] = ci.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(strArray[0]);
                        return string.Join(" ", strArray);
                    }
                    break;
                case TitleCase.All:
                    return ci.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(str);
                default:
                    break;
            }
            return ci.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(str);
        }
    }

    public enum TitleCase
    {
        First,
        All
    }
}
3
  • 2
    The problem with you solution is that "red house" will be converted to "Red House" and not to "Red house" as it was asked in the question.
    – Vadim
    Oct 9, 2013 at 19:31
  • 5
    @Tacttin It will work but the following code is easier to read and performs better char.ToUpper(text[0]) + ((text.Length > 1) ? text.Substring(1).ToLower() : string.Empty); You can read more @ vkreynin.wordpress.com/2013/10/09/…
    – Vadim
    Oct 10, 2013 at 18:07
  • 2
    I don't like this solution, because it combines two quite different situations into one lengthy method. I don't see a conceptual benefit either. And the implementation of capitalizing just the first letter is .. ridiculous. If you want to capitalize the first letter, the obvious implementation is to just capitalize (ToUpper) the first letter. Instead of this, I would have two separate methods. FirstLetterToUpper in Equiso's answer (or in Guillernet's newer answer), and ToTitleCase here, but without the second parameter. Then don't need enum TitleCase. Apr 10, 2017 at 19:04
39

For the first letter, with error checking:

public string CapitalizeFirstLetter(string s)
{
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
        return s;
    if (s.Length == 1)
        return s.ToUpper();
    return s.Remove(1).ToUpper() + s.Substring(1);
}

And here's the same as a handy extension

public static string CapitalizeFirstLetter(this string s)
{
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
        return s;
    if (s.Length == 1)
        return s.ToUpper();
    return s.Remove(1).ToUpper() + s.Substring(1);
}
1
  • Clean approach. Thank you!
    – Philippe
    Dec 12, 2017 at 4:37
17

Using string.Create() and avoiding the throw keyword in our method (yes, you read it right), we can take Marcell's answer one step further. Also, my method handles strings of arbitrary length (e.g., several megabytes of text).

public static string L33t(this string s)
{
    static void ThrowError() => throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
        ThrowError();                      // No "throw" keyword to avoid costly IL

    return string.Create(s.Length, s, (chars, state) =>
    {
        state.AsSpan().CopyTo(chars);      // No slicing to save some CPU cycles
        chars[0] = char.ToUpper(chars[0]);
    });
}

Performance

Here are the numbers for benchmarks run on .NET Core 3.1.7, 64 bit. I added a longer string to pinpoint the cost of extra copies.

Method Data Mean Error StdDev Median
L33t red 8.545 ns 0.4612 ns 1.3308 ns 8.075 ns
Marcell red 9.153 ns 0.3377 ns 0.9471 ns 8.946 ns
L33t red house 7.715 ns 0.1741 ns 0.4618 ns 7.793 ns
Marcell red house 10.537 ns 0.5002 ns 1.4351 ns 10.377 ns
L33t red r(...)house [89] 11.121 ns 0.6774 ns 1.9106 ns 10.612 ns
Marcell red r(...)house [89] 16.739 ns 0.4468 ns 1.3033 ns 16.853 ns

Full test code

using System;
using BenchmarkDotNet.Attributes;
using BenchmarkDotNet.Running;

namespace CorePerformanceTest
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            var summary = BenchmarkRunner.Run<StringUpperTest>();
        }
    }

    public class StringUpperTest
    {
        [Params("red", "red house", "red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red red house")]
        public string Data;

        [Benchmark]
        public string Marcell() => Data.Marcell();

        [Benchmark]
        public string L33t() => Data.L33t();
    }

    internal static class StringExtensions
    {
        public static string Marcell(this string s)
        {
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
                throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

            Span<char> a = stackalloc char[s.Length];
            s.AsSpan(1).CopyTo(a.Slice(1));
            a[0] = char.ToUpper(s[0]);
            return new string(a);
        }

        public static string L33t(this string s)
        {
            static void ThrowError() => throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
                ThrowError(); // IMPORTANT: Do not "throw" here!

            return string.Create(s.Length, s, (chars, state) =>
            {
                state.AsSpan().CopyTo(chars);
                chars[0] = char.ToUpper(chars[0]);
            });
        }
    }
}

Please let me know if you can make it any faster!

2
  • 1
    Why can't you use the throw keyword after string.IsNullOrEmpty (IMPORTANT: Do not "throw" here!)?
    – Casper
    Sep 18, 2020 at 14:16
  • 2
    You can use the throw keyword, but its mere existence will prevent certain compiler optimizations, like inlining. You can run the sample with and without it, and you will see that it really does affect performance.
    – l33t
    Sep 21, 2020 at 7:10
14

As this question is about maximizing performance, I adopted Darren's version to use Spans, which reduces garbage and improves speed by about 10%.

/// <summary>
/// Returns the input string with the first character converted to uppercase
/// </summary>
public static string ToUpperFirst(this string s)
{
    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
        throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

    Span<char> a = stackalloc char[s.Length];
    s.AsSpan(1).CopyTo(a.Slice(1));
    a[0] = char.ToUpper(s[0]);
    return new string(a);
}

Performance

Method Data Mean Error StdDev
Carlos red 107.29 ns 2.2401 ns 3.9234 ns
Darren red 30.93 ns 0.9228 ns 0.8632 ns
Marcell red 26.99 ns 0.3902 ns 0.3459 ns
Carlos red house 106.78 ns 1.9713 ns 1.8439 ns
Darren red house 32.49 ns 0.4253 ns 0.3978 ns
Marcell red house 27.37 ns 0.3888 ns 0.3637 ns

Full test code

using System;
using System.Linq;

using BenchmarkDotNet.Attributes;

namespace CorePerformanceTest
{
    public class StringUpperTest
    {
        [Params("red", "red house")]
        public string Data;

        [Benchmark]
        public string Carlos() => Data.Carlos();

        [Benchmark]
        public string Darren() => Data.Darren();

        [Benchmark]
        public string Marcell() => Data.Marcell();
    }

    internal static class StringExtensions
    {
        public static string Carlos(this string input) =>
            input switch
            {
                null => throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input)),
                "" => throw new ArgumentException($"{nameof(input)} cannot be empty", nameof(input)),
                _ => input.First().ToString().ToUpper() + input.Substring(1)
            };

        public static string Darren(this string s)
        {
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
                throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

            char[] a = s.ToCharArray();
            a[0] = char.ToUpper(a[0]);
            return new string(a);
        }

        public static string Marcell(this string s)
        {
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
                throw new ArgumentException("There is no first letter");

            Span<char> a = stackalloc char[s.Length];
            s.AsSpan(1).CopyTo(a.Slice(1));
            a[0] = char.ToUpper(s[0]);
            return new string(a);
        }
    }

}
2
  • 4
    You should probably safe-guard against super long strings. stackalloc will smash the stack if you have more than around ~1MB of characters.
    – l33t
    Sep 14, 2020 at 8:40
  • Please see my improved answer, using string.Create().
    – l33t
    Sep 14, 2020 at 14:15
13
public static string ToInvarianTitleCase(this string self)
{
    if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(self))
    {
        return self;
    }

    return CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.TextInfo.ToTitleCase(self);
}
9

The fastest method:

private string Capitalize(string s){
    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
    {
        return string.Empty;
    }
    char[] a = s.ToCharArray();
    a[0] = char.ToUpper(a[0]);
    return new string(a);
}

Tests show the next results (string with 1,0000,000 symbols as input):

Test results

1
  • 4
    I recommend returning s parameter when null or empty. Sep 26, 2019 at 13:32
8

Try this:

static public string UpperCaseFirstCharacter(this string text) {
    return Regex.Replace(text, "^[a-z]", m => m.Value.ToUpper());
}
4
  • 2
    or perhaps some other character class (i.e. alphanumeric \w), so that the function is unicode-aware Aug 26, 2013 at 12:51
  • @DmitryLedentsov- C# string class is built on UTF-16 characters. String Class "Represents text as a sequence of UTF-16 code units." Apr 10, 2017 at 19:23
  • An explanation would be in order. E.g., what is the gist/idea? Please respond by editing your answer, not here in comments (without "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today). Jul 12, 2021 at 19:49
  • 1
    The best and smallest answer! Nov 9, 2021 at 8:42
8

Check if the string is not null, convert the first character to upper case and the rest of them to lower case:

public static string FirstCharToUpper(string str)
{
    return str?.First().ToString().ToUpper() + str?.Substring(1).ToLower();
}
1
  • Thank you for the small solution instead of few lines of code just for a string word! Jan 22, 2020 at 8:07
7

If performance/memory usage is an issue then, this one only creates one (1) StringBuilder and one (1) new String of the same size as the original string.

public static string ToUpperFirst(this string str) {
  if(!string.IsNullOrEmpty(str)) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(str);
    sb[0] = char.ToUpper(sb[0]);

    return sb.ToString();

  } else return str;
}
2
  • 4
    This could be done with a simple char[] rather than having all the infrastructure of a StringBuilder wrap it. Instead of new StringBuilder(str), use str.ToCharArray(), and instead of sb.ToString(), use new string(charArray). StringBuilder emulates the type of indexing that a character array exposes natively, so the actual .ToUpper line can be essentially the same. :-) Nov 17, 2016 at 18:49
  • Darren (a year later) shows how to do this using ToCharArray, as suggested by @JonathanGilbert Apr 10, 2017 at 20:38
6

Since I happened to be working on this also, and was looking around for any ideas, this is the solution I came to. It uses LINQ, and will be able to capitalize the first letter of a string, even if the first occurrence isn't a letter. Here's the extension method I ended up making.

public static string CaptalizeFirstLetter(this string data)
{
    var chars = data.ToCharArray();

    // Find the Index of the first letter
    var charac = data.First(char.IsLetter);
    var i = data.IndexOf(charac);

    // capitalize that letter
    chars[i] = char.ToUpper(chars[i]);

    return new string(chars);
}

I'm sure there's a way to optimize or clean this up a little bit.

6

If you only care about the first letter being capitalized and it does not matter the rest of the string, you can just select the first character, make it upper case and concatenate it with the rest of the string without the original first character.

String word ="red house";
word = word[0].ToString().ToUpper() + word.Substring(1, word.length -1);
//result: word = "Red house"

We need to convert the first character ToString(), because we are reading it as a Char array, and the Char type does not have a ToUpper() method.

5

Here's a way to do it as an extension method:

static public string UpperCaseFirstCharacter(this string text)
{
    if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(text))
    {
        return string.Format(
            "{0}{1}",
            text.Substring(0, 1).ToUpper(),
            text.Substring(1));
    }

    return text;
}

It can then be called like:

//yields "This is Brian's test.":
"this is Brian's test.".UpperCaseFirstCharacter();

And here are some unit tests for it:

[Test]
public void UpperCaseFirstCharacter_ZeroLength_ReturnsOriginal()
{
    string orig = "";
    string result = orig.UpperCaseFirstCharacter();

    Assert.AreEqual(orig, result);
}

[Test]
public void UpperCaseFirstCharacter_SingleCharacter_ReturnsCapital()
{
    string orig = "c";
    string result = orig.UpperCaseFirstCharacter();

    Assert.AreEqual("C", result);
}

[Test]
public void UpperCaseFirstCharacter_StandardInput_CapitalizeOnlyFirstLetter()
{
    string orig = "this is Brian's test.";
    string result = orig.UpperCaseFirstCharacter();

    Assert.AreEqual("This is Brian's test.", result);
}
1
  • 1
    string.Format is overkill; simply do text.Substring(0, 1).ToUpper() + text.Substring(1). Apr 10, 2017 at 19:26
5

I found something in C# Uppercase First Letter - Dot Net Perls:

static string UppercaseFirst(string s)
{
    // Check for empty string.
    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
    {
        return string.Empty;
    }

    // Return char and concat substring.
    return char.ToUpper(s[0]) + s.Substring(1);
}
1
  • 2
    How is this an improvement over Equiso's answer 4 years earlier? Apr 10, 2017 at 19:18
3

This will do it although it will also make sure that there are no errant capitals that are not at the beginning of the word.

public string(string s)
{
    System.Globalization.CultureInfo c = new System.Globalization.CultureInfo("en-us", false)
    System.Globalization.TextInfo t = c.TextInfo;

    return t.ToTitleCase(s);
}
2
  • 2
    Needs a null check of s before the call to ToTitleCase. May 11, 2014 at 3:02
  • @CarlosMuñoz tlhIngan Hol does not have letter casing in its script. :-) Nov 17, 2016 at 18:52
2

We can do this (C# 8.0, .NET 5):

input?.Length > 0 ? char.ToUpperInvariant(input[0]) + input[1..] : input

I believe that is short enough to do inline.


If input is an empty string, we get an empty string. If input is null, we get null.

Otherwise, the code takes the first character input[0] and convert it to uppercase with char.ToUpperInvariant. And concatenate the rest input[1..].

The compiler will convert the range access to a call to Substring, plus it can take advantage of the fact that we already got the length.

Over the accepted answer, this has the advantage of not using LINQ. Some other answers convert the string to array just to take the first character. This code does not do that either.


If you prefer an extension method, you can do this:

public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string input) =>
        input?.Length > 0 ? char.ToUpperInvariant(input[0]) + input[1..] : input;

What if you prefer to throw? OK, have it throw:

public static string FirstCharToUpper(this string input) =>
        input switch
        {
            null => throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input)),
            _ => input.Length > 0 ? char.ToUpperInvariant(input[0]) + input[1..] : input
        };

Here roughly equivalent code (since we are making an extension method, we can be a bit more verbose):

public static string FirstCharToUpperEquivalent(this string input)
{
    if (input == null)
    {
        throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input));
    }

    var length = input.Length;
    if (length == 0)
    {
        return input;
    }

    string firstCharacter = char.ToUpperInvariant(input[0]).ToString();
    return string.Concat(firstCharacter, input.Substring(1, length - 1));
}

I did a benchmark with 1000 rounds of 155 words (So they were called 155000 times), and this is the result:

Benchmarking type Tests
  TestAccepted         00:00:00.0465979
  TestProposalNoThrow  00:00:00.0092839
  TestProposalDoThrow  00:00:00.0092938
  TestProposalEquival  00:00:00.0091463

I ran it on Windows 10, Intel Core i3, using the code from Simple microbenchmarking in C# by Jon Skeet.

1
string emp="TENDULKAR";
string output;
output=emp.First().ToString().ToUpper() + String.Join("", emp.Skip(1)).ToLower();
5
  • Why ToLower() at the tail?. There is no requirement for other letters but the first one. Oct 22, 2013 at 16:41
  • String is can be anything its Upper or Lower.so its a generic solution for all string.
    – Shailesh
    Nov 11, 2013 at 4:55
  • Why Join instead of emp.First().ToString().ToUpper() + emp.Substring(1);? Probably need to be more defensive too: output = string.IsNullOrEmpty(emp) ? string.Empty : [...]. Also, fwiw, agree with @CarlosMuñoz -- you don't need the ToLower() for the OP's question.
    – ruffin
    Aug 18, 2015 at 19:17
  • @ ruffin--> using Substring is also good writing style of code,I agree your solution to trim a code but in this case writing a ToLower() is good programing practice.string can be anything In Upper case or Lower case depends upon user input, i give a generic solution.
    – Shailesh
    Sep 23, 2015 at 12:19
  • 1
    @Shailesh - However, the question did not request that only the first letter be a capital. It asked that the first letter be changed to be a capital. Without further clarification from author, the most natural assumption is that the remainder of the string be unchanged. Given that you are answering three years later, please assume that the accepted answer does what asker requested. Only give a different answer if there is some technical reason to do it differently. Apr 10, 2017 at 19:40
1

Here's the code that worked for me:

private string StringLetterUppercase(string input)
{
    if (input == null)
    {
        throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(input));
    }
    else if (input == "")
    {
        throw new ArgumentException($"{nameof(input)} cannot be empty", nameof(input));
    }
    else
    {
        return input.First().ToString().ToUpper() + input.Substring(1);
    }
}
1

There seems to be a lot of complexity here when all you need is:

/// <summary>
/// Returns the input string with the first character converted to uppercase if a letter
/// </summary>
/// <remarks>Null input returns null</remarks>
public static string FirstLetterToUpperCase(this string s)
{
    if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(s))
        return s;

    return char.ToUpper(s[0]) + s.Substring(1);
}

Noteworthy points:

  1. It's an extension method.

  2. If the input is null, empty or white space the input is returned as is.

  3. String.IsNullOrWhiteSpace was introduced with .NET Framework 4. This won't work with older frameworks.

3
  • 2
    I don't see how this is an improvement on the original accepted answer from four years ago. In fact, it is inconsistent (harmlessly so, but four years late, I have high standards for a new answer adding benefit): The only benefit of using the newer IsNullOrWhiteSpace rather than IsNullOrEmpty, is if you are going to find and change the first non-white-space. But you don't - you always operate on s[0]. So its pointless [both semantically and performance] to use IsNullOrWhiteSpace. Apr 10, 2017 at 19:50
  • 1
    ... why this usage of IsNullOrWhiteSpace troubles me, is that a careless reader might think "He checked for white space, so the following code really does find and change a letter, even if it is preceded by white space". Since your code will fail to change a "first" letter preceded by white space, using IsNullOrWhiteSpace can only mislead a reader. Apr 10, 2017 at 19:56
  • ... oops, I don't mean the accepted answer, I mean Equiso's answer from the same time period. Apr 10, 2017 at 20:04
1

This is the fastest way:

public static unsafe void ToUpperFirst(this string str)
{
    if (str == null)
        return;
    fixed (char* ptr = str)
        *ptr = char.ToUpper(*ptr);
}

Without changing the original string:

public static unsafe string ToUpperFirst(this string str)
{
    if (str == null)
        return null;
    string ret = string.Copy(str);
    fixed (char* ptr = ret)
        *ptr = char.ToUpper(*ptr);
    return ret;
}
8
  • Welcome to Stack Overflow! While this code may answer the question, it would be better to include some context and explain how it works. That last line has a lot going on, so why does this lead to maximum performance?
    – ryanyuyu
    Aug 13, 2015 at 16:39
  • 2
    @Anonymous please edit that into your post instead of just commenting.
    – ryanyuyu
    Aug 13, 2015 at 18:09
  • 2
    To expand of Grax's comment, it's because of how C# interns strings. So the references really might be equal.
    – ryanyuyu
    Aug 13, 2015 at 18:13
  • 3
    Not just interning. Strings are supposed to be, and assumed to be by all .NET code, immutable. Any situation where two variables point at the same underlying System.String object would see the string change out from under it. Consider if a given System.String object is used as a key in a Dictionary<string, TValue> -- the string's hash could suddenly be incorrect, putting the value in the wrong bucket and corrupting the data structure. The second version is the only "safe" version to use, and even it is technically violating the runtime's assumptions and the CLR specification. Nov 17, 2016 at 19:00
  • 1
    Don't use either of these approaches. Approach #1: Violating the immutability of the built-in string class is unacceptable - a violation of sane coding principles. If programmer wants a mutable string, they should build a custom class around char[]. Approach #2: No need to do unsafe programming to accomplish this. See Darren's answer which does the equivalent, using ToCharArray. Apr 10, 2017 at 20:30
1

I think the below method is the best solution.

class Program
{
    static string UppercaseWords(string value)
    {
        char[] array = value.ToCharArray();
        // Handle the first letter in the string.
        if (array.Length >= 1)
        {
            if (char.IsLower(array[0]))
            {
                array[0] = char.ToUpper(array[0]);
            }
        }
        // Scan through the letters, checking for spaces.
        // ... Uppercase the lowercase letters following spaces.
        for (int i = 1; i < array.Length; i++)
        {
            if (array[i - 1] == ' ')
            {
                if (char.IsLower(array[i]))
                {
                    array[i] = char.ToUpper(array[i]);
                }
            }
        }
        return new string(array);
    }

    static void Main()
    {
        // Uppercase words in these strings.
        const string value1 = "something in the way";
        const string value2 = "dot net PERLS";
        const string value3 = "String_two;three";
        const string value4 = " sam";
        // ... Compute the uppercase strings.
        Console.WriteLine(UppercaseWords(value1));
        Console.WriteLine(UppercaseWords(value2));
        Console.WriteLine(UppercaseWords(value3));
        Console.WriteLine(UppercaseWords(value4));
    }
}

Output

Something In The Way
Dot Net PERLS
String_two;three
 Sam

Reference

1

Possible solution to resolve your problem:

   public static string FirstToUpper(this string lowerWord)
   {
       if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(lowerWord) || string.IsNullOrEmpty(lowerWord))
            return lowerWord;
       return new StringBuilder(lowerWord.Substring(0, 1).ToUpper())
                 .Append(lowerWord.Substring(1))
                 .ToString();
   }
1

I wanted to provide a "maximum performance" answer. In my mind, a "maximum performance" answer catches all scenarios and provides the answer to the question accounting for those scenarios. So, here is my answer. With these reasons:

  1. IsNullOrWhiteSpace accounts for strings that are just spaces or null/empty.

  2. .Trim() removes white space from the front and back of the string.

  3. .First() takes the first element of an IEnumerable<TSource> (or string).

  4. We should check to see if it is a letter that can/should be uppercase.

  5. We then add the rest of the string, only if the length indicates we should.

  6. By .NET best practice, we should provide a culture under System.Globalization.CultureInfo.

  7. Providing them as optional parameters makes this method totally reusable, without having to type the chosen culture every time.

  8. I also noticed that my and most of these answers did not maintain the whitespace at the beginning of the string. This will also show how to maintain that whitespace.

    //Capitalize the first letter disregard all chars using regex.
    public static string RegCapString(this string instring, string culture = "en-US", bool useSystem = false)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(instring))
        {
            return instring;
        }
        var m = Regex.Match(instring, "[A-Za-z]").Index;
        return instring.Substring(0, m) + instring[m].ToString().ToUpper(new CultureInfo(culture, useSystem)) + instring.Substring(m + 1);
    }
    //Capitalize first char if it is a letter disregard white space.
    public static string CapString(this string instring, string culture = "en-US", bool useSystem = false)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(instring) ||
           !char.IsLetter(instring.Trim().First()))
        {
            return instring;
        }
        var whiteSpaces = instring.Length - instring.TrimStart().Length;
        return (new string(' ', whiteSpaces)) + 
            instring.Trim().First().ToString().ToUpper(new CultureInfo(culture, useSystem)) + 
            ((instring.TrimStart().Length > 1) ? instring.Substring(whiteSpaces + 1) : "");
    }
    
4
  • 3
    While this covers most cases, wouldn't it be rather slow considering the number of strings being created with each operation? There is a ton of string allocation going on here. Preferably it would be allocated once, and only once. Aug 10, 2018 at 0:45
  • "ienumerable" doesn't seem right. Isn't it spelled differently? Jul 12, 2021 at 20:32
  • sorry, @PeterMortensen yes, it is correct when it is capitalized it will look right. Aug 4, 2021 at 20:19
  • @DouglasGaskell I changed my answer to include the regex for a very simple answer. I also condensed my original method, reducing the number of string assignments per your comment. You can see my original answer in edit history. Aug 4, 2021 at 21:32
0

Expanding on Carlos' question above, if you want to capitalize multiple sentences you may use this code:

    /// <summary>
    /// Capitalize first letter of every sentence. 
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="inputSting"></param>
    /// <returns></returns>
    public string CapitalizeSentences (string inputSting)
    {
        string result = string.Empty;
        if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(inputSting))
        {
            string[] sentences = inputSting.Split('.');

            foreach (string sentence in sentences)
            {
                result += string.Format ("{0}{1}.", sentence.First().ToString().ToUpper(), sentence.Substring(1)); 
            }
        }

        return result; 
    }
1
  • What does "Carlos" refer to? The OP (original poster)? Jul 12, 2021 at 20:54
0

It seems like none of the solutions given here will deal with a white space before the string.

Just adding this as a thought:

public static string SetFirstCharUpper2(string aValue, bool aIgonreLeadingSpaces = true)
{
    if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(aValue))
        return aValue;

    string trimmed = aIgonreLeadingSpaces
           ? aValue.TrimStart()
           : aValue;

    return char.ToUpper(trimmed[0]) + trimmed.Substring(1);
}

It should handle this won't work on other answers (that sentence has a space in the beginning), and if you don't like the space trimming, just pass a false as the second parameter (or change the default to false, and pass true if you want to deal with space)).

0

FluentSharp has the lowerCaseFirstLetter method which does this.

0

The following function is correct for all ways:

static string UppercaseWords(string value)
{
    char[] array = value.ToCharArray();
    // Handle the first letter in the string.
    if (array.Length >= 1)
    {
        if (char.IsLower(array[0]))
        {
            array[0] = char.ToUpper(array[0]);
        }
    }
    // Scan through the letters, checking for spaces.
    // ... Uppercase the lowercase letters following spaces.
    for (int i = 1; i < array.Length; i++)
    {
        if (array[i - 1] == ' ')
        {
            if (char.IsLower(array[i]))
            {
                array[i] = char.ToUpper(array[i]);
            }
        }
    }
    return new string(array);
}

I found that here.

6
  • 1
    Why? Why add yet another answer when there are already so many answers that seem similar? What's wrong with all the existing answers, that prompted you to add another one? Apr 10, 2017 at 19:31
  • Because this answare is correct for all ways. Take it easy.
    – user4266998
    Apr 11, 2017 at 12:26
  • 1
    I am sorry; I was unnecessarily harsh. I'll stick to the facts: 1) This is essentially the same as thattolleyguy's answer seven years earlier. 2) This has the same flaw as that answer: doesn't handle white space other than blank character. 3) This answers a slightly different question than OP was asking. Use an answer like this if you want all words to have first letter capitalized. 4) Usually, the simpler way to accomplish that is to use TitleInfo.ToTitleCase. (On the other hand, an advantage of code sample is can customize as desired.) Apr 12, 2017 at 0:15
  • Correcting myself: This is different than thattolleyguy's approach: it leaves untouched letters that aren't the first letter of the word. Instead, it is a duplicate of zamoldar's answer. Favorably, kudos to Darian for giving the link to the source - it seems zamoldar plagiarized without giving credit. Because of providing that source link, and thereby improving the discussion, I am upvoting this answer, despite my criticism of it. Apr 12, 2017 at 0:48
  • 1
    Darian, two improvements that could be made: 1) use char.IsWhiteSpace( array[ i -1 ] ) instead of .. == ' ', to handle all white space. 2) remove the two places that do if (char.isLower(..)) - they serve no purpose. ToUpper simply does nothing if a character isn't lower case. Apr 12, 2017 at 0:59