96

I wanted code to convert all the characters in strings to uppercase or lowercase in Java.

I found a method that goes something like this:

public static String changelowertoupper()
{
         String str = "CyBeRdRaGoN";
         str=str.toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH);
         return str;
}

Now I've read that using certain Locales, like Turkish, "returns i (without dot) instead of i (with dot)."

Is it safe to use Locales like UK, US, ENGLISH, etc.? Are there any big differences between them when applied to strings?

Which is the most preferred Locale for Strings?

4
  • 1
    Did you tried to not use locales at all?
    – alaster
    Jun 16, 2012 at 11:43
  • 1
    i tried it...it's similar to Locale.ENGLISH......but still i doubt whether it has any differences as there exists for turkish.... so u r saying using no Locales would do....???
    – Arjun K P
    Jun 16, 2012 at 11:54
  • 4
    Your application will choose default locale, so if someone will run your application in Turkish with turkish locale he will see i without dot
    – alaster
    Jun 16, 2012 at 12:02
  • This happened to me. A trick I used to ease the programming caused my program to malfunction in Window's Turkish editions. The program started to search for "adjectıves.txt" instead of "adjectives.txt".
    – WVrock
    Oct 28, 2016 at 7:41

6 Answers 6

87

I think you should use locale ,

For instance, "TITLE".toLowerCase() in a Turkish locale returns "tıtle", where 'ı' is the LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS I character. To obtain correct results for locale insensitive strings, use toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH).

I refer to these links as solution to your problem and it has point to keep in mind in you situation "Turkish"

**FROM THE LINKS**

toLowerCase() respects internationalization (i18n). It performs the case conversion with respect to your Locale. When you call toLowerCase(), internally toLowerCase(Locale.getDefault()) is getting called. It is locale sensitive and you should not write a logic around it interpreting locale independently.

import java.util.Locale;
 
public class ToLocaleTest {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        Locale.setDefault(new Locale("lt")); //setting Lithuanian as locale
        String str = "\u00cc";
    System.out.println("Before case conversion is "+str+
" and length is "+str.length());// Ì
        String lowerCaseStr = str.toLowerCase();
    System.out.println("Lower case is "+lowerCaseStr+
" and length is "+lowerCaseStr.length());// iı`
    }
}

In the above program, look at the string length before and after conversion. It will be 1 and 3. Yes the length of the string before and after case conversion is different. Your logic will go for a toss when you depend on string length on this scenario. When your program gets executed in a different environment, it may fail. This will be a nice catch in code review.

To make it safer, you may use another method toLowerCase(Locale.English) and override the locale to English always. But then you are not internationalized.

So the crux is, toLowerCase() is locale specific.

reference 1
reference 2
reference 3


Dotless-i, is a lowercase 'i' without dot. The uppercase of this character is the usual "I". There is another character, "I with dot". The lowercase of this character is the usual lowercase "i".

Have you noticed the problem? This unsymetrical conversion causes a serious problem in programming. We face this problem mostly in Java applications because of (IMHO) poor implementation of toLowerCase and toUpperCase functions.

In Java, String.toLowerCase() method converts characters to lowercase according to the default locale. This causes problems if your application works in Turkish locale and especially if you are using this function for a file name or a url that must obey a certain character set.

I have blogged about two serious examples before: The compile errors with Script libraries with "i" in their names and XSP Manager's fault if an XPage is in a database with "I" in its name.

There is a long history, as I said. For instance in some R7 version, router was unable to send a message to a recipient if his/her name starts with "I". Message reporting agents was not running in Turkish locale until R8. Anyone with Turkish locale could not install Lotus Notes 8.5.1 (it's real!). The list goes on...

There is almost no beta tester from Turkey and customers don't open PMR for these problems. So these problems are not going up to the first priority for development teams.

Even Java team has added a special warning to the latest documentation:

This method is locale sensitive, and may produce unexpected results if used for strings that are intended to be interpreted locale independently. Examples are programming language identifiers, protocol keys, and HTML tags. For instance, "TITLE".toLowerCase() in a Turkish locale returns "tıtle", where 'ı' is the LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS I character. To obtain correct results for locale insensitive strings, use toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH).

9
  • 1
    so u r saying if i specified Locale as ENGLISH or simply str.toLowerCase(). It would do......and i don't have to worry about the string length....???
    – Arjun K P
    Jun 16, 2012 at 12:00
  • @tchrist what do you mean my answer does has a question mark for example purpose
    – shareef
    Jun 17, 2012 at 12:40
  • 1
    U+0131 LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS I is “ı”, not “?”. Putting a question mark in the answer is wrong. It’s indicative of a encoding bug, and moreover one specifically warned against the Unicode Standard. Put the right code point there. You should never ever ever replace unprintable code points with question marks. Ever.
    – tchrist
    Jun 17, 2012 at 12:45
  • 1
    @tchrist typically, I'd agree with you, so I upvoted your comment. However, it's worth noting that in this case, the OP was quoting directly from the Javadoc of the toUpperCase() and toLowerCase() methods.
    – Pops
    May 2, 2013 at 16:45
  • 2
    How about using Locale.ROOT instead of Locale.ENGLISH? That's in case you don't know the locale of the string, and you want to convert its case without making any locale-related changes to it.
    – Stan
    Dec 6, 2018 at 15:17
18

You can create appropriate locale for your String's language.

For example:

toUpperCase(new Locale("tr","TR"));

will do the trick for Turkish.

1
  • this is exacly what I'm looking for :)
    – hasankzl
    Jul 22, 2022 at 5:23
5
String str = "CyBeRdRaGoN";

str = str.toLowerCase(); // str = "cyberdragon"

str = str.toUpperCase(); // str = "CYBERDRAGON"

Your application will choose default locale, so if someone will run your application in Turkish with turkish locale he will see i without dot

1

If you are using this function for checking a string (e.g. search) It is safe to use the strings in a lowercase or uppercase form to check. You may use it like this:

if (mViewData.list.data[i].Name.toLowerCase(new Locale("tr", "TR"))
   .contains(mViewHolder.tctSearch.getText().toString().trim()
                                      .toLowerCase(new Locale("tr", "TR")))) {
    // your code here...
}

I confront the same issue but in a case of search in listview. I added this answer that it may help someone who has the same issue.

0

If you want you can use android:textLocale="tr" option on XML side.

<TextView
android:text="inciler"
android:textAllCaps="true"
android:textLocale="tr" />

Output: İNCİLER

0

In kotlin

private fun changelowertoupper(): String {
        val str = "CyBeRdRaGoN"
        return str.lowercase()
    }
1
  • 2
    NOTE: since kotlin 1.5.0, use .lowercase() (which defaults to Locale.ROOT) (!!!) May 6, 2021 at 21:45

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