11

I would like to check if a string is a camel case or not (boolean). I am inclined to use a regex but any other elegant solution would work. I wrote a simple regex

(?:[A-Z])(?:[a-z])+(?:[A-Z])(?:[a-z])+

Would this be correct? Or am I missing something?

Edit

I would like to capture names in a collection of text documents of the format

McDowell
O'Connor
T.Kasting

Edit2

I have modified my regex based on the suggestion in the comments

(?:[A-Z])(?:\S?)+(?:[A-Z])(?:[a-z])+
15
  • 2
    It's kind of a difficult thing to determine programatically. Is camel camel case? What about _camel, Camel, _Camel, CONSTCAMEL, HTML, or var_camelCase? It's pretty difficult to define unless you know ahead of time what the formatting is.
    – Silas Ray
    Commented Apr 16, 2012 at 22:39
  • @DavidNehme Not really, I have checked it and my requirements are different/
    – Dexter
    Commented Apr 16, 2012 at 22:40
  • @sr2222 What do you mean by formatting? I am looking to capture names like McGauge, LePierre etc in a piece of text. Hope this adds more context.
    – Dexter
    Commented Apr 16, 2012 at 22:41
  • @mcenley, then specify your requirements?
    – Qtax
    Commented Apr 16, 2012 at 22:41
  • 1
    How about some examples of inputs you would like to fail? Commented Apr 16, 2012 at 23:45

8 Answers 8

19

You could check if a string has both upper and lowercase.

def is_camel_case(s):
    return s != s.lower() and s != s.upper() and "_" not in s


tests = [
    "camel",
    "camelCase",
    "CamelCase",
    "CAMELCASE",
    "camelcase",
    "Camelcase",
    "Case",
    "camel_case",
]

for test in tests:
    print(test, is_camel_case(test))

Output:

camel False
camelCase True
CamelCase True
CAMELCASE False
camelcase False
Camelcase True
Case True
camel_case False
6
  • 5
    Surely this doesn't work? CAMELcase is not valid and will return true.
    – Strobe_
    Commented Dec 7, 2016 at 11:26
  • 2
    It depends if you want to allow acronyms. e.g. DecodeRGB or DecodeRgb Commented Dec 8, 2016 at 19:56
  • This returns false for _camelCase
    – user3064538
    Commented May 27, 2020 at 11:07
  • 2
    Why is this the accepted answer? This is not correct
    – benmaq
    Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 10:17
  • Also does not handle numeric or punctuation well. Commented Nov 25, 2021 at 12:06
3

You probably want something more like:

(?:[A-Z][a-z]*)+

Altho that would allow all caps. You could avoid that with:

(?:[A-Z][a-z]+)+

Anchor the expression with ^ and $ or \z if required.

3

if you do not want strings starting with upper-case e.g Case and Camelcase to pass True. edit @william's answer:

def is_camel_case(s):
  if s != s.lower() and s != s.upper() and "_" not in s and sum(i.isupper() for i in s[1:-1]) == 1:
      return True
  return False



tests = [
"camel",
"camelCase",
"CamelCase",
"CAMELCASE",
"camelcase",
"Camelcase",
"Case",
"camel_case",
]

for test in tests:
   print(test, is_camel_case(test))

the results:

camel False
camelCase True
CamelCase True
CAMELCASE False
camelcase False
Camelcase False
Case False
camel_case False
2
  • 1
    "CAMELCASE", "Camelcase", and "Case" are valid CamelCase strings.
    – MattS
    Commented Dec 29, 2022 at 12:08
  • 1
    @MattS The question is if that is useful. In many coding styles, 'Case' would be a simple class name, and not a camelcase class or method name. Camel case is useful to distinguish words in a string. 'Camelcase' is also not a very useful identifier. Coming from a google search, Cidis answer is the one that helped me the most.
    – tm243
    Commented Feb 12, 2023 at 7:55
2

Convert your string to camel case using a library like inflection. If it doesn't change, it must've already been camel case.

from inflection import camelize

def is_camel_case(s):
    # return True for both 'CamelCase' and 'camelCase'
    return camelize(s) == s or camelize(s, False) == s
0

I think you might get away with just checking that the string has a capital with a lower case letter before it if(line =~ m/[a-z][A-Z]/). Just checking lower and upper fails on the given examples. ~Ben

1
  • I have modified my regex in the original question.
    – Dexter
    Commented Apr 16, 2012 at 23:03
0
sub_string= 'hiSantyWhereAreYou'  `Change the string here and try`
index=[x for x,y in enumerate(list(sub_string)) if(y.isupper())] `Finding the index 
of caps`
camel_=[]
temp=0
for m in index:
    camel_.append(sub_string[temp:m])
    temp=m
if(len(index)>0):
    camel_.append(sub_string[index[-1]::])
    print('The individual camel case words are', camel_) `Output is in list`
else:
    camel_.append(sub_string)
    print('The given string is not camel Case')
1
  • Could you please add some explanation about how and why your code snippet provides an answer to the question? Thank you.
    – deHaar
    Commented Jul 30, 2019 at 6:44
0

This regex solution worked for my use case ([A-Z][a-z\S]+)([A-Z][a-z]+)

0

CamelCase

is the practice of writing phrases without spaces or punctuation, indicating the separation of words with a single capitalized letter

def iscamelcase(string):
    non_alpha = [i for i in string if not i.isalpha()]
    substrings= string.translate({ord(i): ' ' for i in non_alpha}).split(' ')
    for string in substrings:
        if not all(char.isupper() for char in string):
            for idx,i in enumerate(string):
                if i.isupper() and idx > 0:
                    return True
    return False
  1. search the string for other signs than charackters and store in non_alpha
  2. replace all non_alpha signs with empty space and split them by empty space to create substrings
  3. Check all substrings to be not fully uppercase and if not the index of the uppercase cant be >0

Output

camel False
camelCase True
CamelCase True
CAMELCASE False
camelcase False
Camelcase False
Case False
camel_case False

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