8

I need to change the first letter of every line in a file to uppercase, e.g.

the bear ate the fish.
the river was too fast.

Would become:

The bear ate the fish.
The river was too fast.
  • The document contains some special letters: a, a, á, à, ǎ, ā, b, c, d, e, e, é, è, ě, ē, f, g, h, i, i, í, ì, ǐ, ī, j, k, l, m, n, o, o, ó, ò, ǒ, ō, p, q, r, s, t, u, u, ú, ù, ǔ, ü, ǘ, ǜ, ǚ, ǖ, ū, v, w, x, y, and z.
  • The uppercase forms of these letters are: A, A, Á, À, Ǎ, Ā, B, C, D, E, E, É, È, Ě, Ē, F, G, H, I, I, Í, Ì, Ǐ, Ī, J, K, L, M, N, O, O, Ó, Ò, Ǒ, Ō, P, Q, R, S, T, U, U, Ú, Ù, Ǔ, Ü, Ǘ, Ǜ, Ǚ, Ǖ, Ū, V, W, X, Y, and Z.

How can I change the first letter of every line in the file to uppercase?

5
  • 1
    I think what Engineer meant was what programming language. PHP, etc. Apr 4, 2012 at 7:13
  • BASH would be preferred.
    – Village
    Apr 4, 2012 at 7:15
  • The question is tagged 'bash'...
    – The Nail
    Apr 4, 2012 at 7:15
  • Sorry, didn't notice the 'bash' tag. I removed my PHP answers. Apr 4, 2012 at 7:18
  • I am afraid none of the solutions actually work for you, I just realize your character set requirement is in unicode. It means the input file is in a format we don't really know.
    – pizza
    Apr 4, 2012 at 19:14

6 Answers 6

16

Use sed:

sed  's/^\(.\)/\U\1/' yourfile > convertedfile

Little explanation:

  • the ^ represents the start of a line.
  • . matches any character
  • \U converts to uppercase
  • \( ... \) specifies a section to be referenced later (as \1 in this case); parentheses are to be escaped here.

Do not try to redirect the output to the same file in one command (i.e. > yourfile) as you will lose your data. If you want to replace in the same file then check out joelparkerhenderson's answer.

1
  • Works a treat, thank you for a simple effective solution.
    – MitchellK
    Aug 21, 2018 at 11:02
7
pearl.311> cat file1
linenumber11
linenumber2  
linenumber1
linenumber4
linenumber6
pearl.312> awk '{print toupper(substr($0,1,1))""substr($0,2)}' file1
Linenumber11
Linenumber2  
Linenumber1
Linenumber4
Linenumber6
pearl.313> 
0
6

There's a few sed answers with s/^\(.\)/\U\1/. GNU sed also has a \u directive that changes only the next letter to uppercase, so

sed 's/./\u&/'

Although if the first character on a line is a space, you won't see an uppercase letter, so

sed 's/[[:alpha:]]/\u&/'
1
  • I'd say this is the better answer. Dec 4, 2013 at 12:49
2

To change the file in place:

sed -i -e 's/^\(.\)/\U\1/' file.txt
2
  • Works! But also, Why do I also get the error(warning??) : sed: can't read : No such file or directory? Jun 6, 2013 at 13:46
  • @bikashg you got the error because there was a typo in my answer-- sorry-- I've fixed it now. Jun 9, 2013 at 5:54
1

You can put your special characters in place of a-z and A-Z

function up { local c="$1" ; echo -e "$c" | tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]' ; }
while read line
do
  echo $(up ${line:0:1})${line:1}
done
0

Pure bash:

while read x ; do echo "${x^*}" ; done < inputfile > outputfile

Test/demo (remove the code after done for more complete output):

for f in a, a, á, à, ǎ, ā, b, c, d, e, e, é, è, ě, ē, f, g, h, i, i, í, ì, ǐ, ī, \
         j, k, l, m, n, o, o, ó, ò, ǒ, ō, p, q, r, s, t, \
         u, u, ú, ù, ǔ, ü, ǘ, ǜ, ǚ, ǖ, ū, v, w, x, y, and z.
do  echo "$f foo bar." ; done | 
while read x ; do echo "${x^*}" ; done | head -15 | tail -6

Output:

E, foo bar.
E, foo bar.
É, foo bar.
È, foo bar.
Ě, foo bar.
Ē, foo bar.

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