How do I take a string and convert it to lower or upper case in Ruby?
11 Answers
Ruby has a few methods for changing the case of strings. To convert to lowercase, use downcase
:
"hello James!".downcase #=> "hello james!"
Similarly, upcase
capitalizes every letter and capitalize
capitalizes the first letter of the string but lowercases the rest:
"hello James!".upcase #=> "HELLO JAMES!"
"hello James!".capitalize #=> "Hello james!"
"hello James!".titleize #=> "Hello James!" (Rails/ActiveSupport only)
If you want to modify a string in place, you can add an exclamation point to any of those methods:
string = "hello James!"
string.downcase!
string #=> "hello james!"
Refer to the documentation for String for more information.
-
4Watch out! looks to me like using the bang "!" will return nil if there's no capital letter. so str = "this".downcase! returns str = nil Nov 2, 2012 at 22:29
-
16Oftentimes, "bang methods" return
nil
; you should use them if you want to change an object in place, not if you want to store the value in another variable. Nov 2, 2012 at 23:28 -
but it'is a problem in "i" char if you are using utf-8. For instance, string = FEN BİLİMLERİ. string.capitalize must be "Fen bİlİmlerİ" or it could be changed because of css font style choice.– eayurtJan 3, 2013 at 12:01
-
'coração'.upcase
produces'CORAçãO'
. It may be advised to use some gem like “unicode_utils“, “activesupport“ or “Unicode”. Apr 24, 2016 at 22:55
You can find out all the methods available on a String by opening irb and running:
"MyString".methods.sort
And for a list of the methods available for strings in particular:
"MyString".own_methods.sort
I use this to find out new and interesting things about objects which I might not otherwise have known existed.
-
12The only problem with this answer is that #own_methods doesn't appear to exist. Is it from an Irb extension? Feb 1, 2012 at 23:38
-
12Hi - I thought I was learning something new with the #own_methods then, but it doesn't exist for me either. However, I usually go: ("MyString".methods - Object.merhods).sort May 9, 2012 at 17:04
-
2Very similar to the patch @fakeleft referenced, and I have it in my .irbrc file. I monkey patch Object and create #own_methds with this: (obj.methods - obj.class.superclass.instance_methods).sort– mlambieFeb 3, 2013 at 18:34
-
1@Laser The methods for String in particular are the ones defined in the String class itself. The methods available on a String include the ones defined in its superclass(es).– anonMay 15, 2015 at 0:47
-
1Use
String.public_instance_methods(false)
to find all public instance methods specifically defined byString
. Nov 15, 2019 at 22:41
Like @endeR mentioned, if internationalization is a concern, the unicode_utils gem is more than adequate.
$ gem install unicode_utils
$ irb
> require 'unicode_utils'
=> true
> UnicodeUtils.downcase("FEN BİLİMLERİ", :tr)
=> "fen bilimleri"
String manipulations in Ruby 2.4 are now unicode-sensitive.
The ruby downcase
method returns a string with its uppercase letters replaced by lowercase letters.
"string".downcase
https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.1.0/String.html#method-i-downcase
-
ruby conversions here: techotopia.com/index.php/Ruby_String_Conversions– TStamperJun 20, 2009 at 0:20
-
2While technically this does help answer the question, it really should be more illuminating. Show the result perhaps? Maybe a link to the documentation? Mar 9, 2016 at 23:50
The Rails Active Support gem provides upcase
, downcase
, swapcase
,capitalize
, etc. methods with internationalization support:
gem install activesupport
irb -ractive_support/core_ext/string
"STRING ÁÂÃÀÇÉÊÍÓÔÕÚ".mb_chars.downcase.to_s
=> "string áâãàçéêíóôõú"
"string áâãàçéêíóôõú".mb_chars.upcase.to_s
=> "STRING ÁÂÃÀÇÉÊÍÓÔÕÚ"
The .swapcase
method transforms the uppercase letters in a string to lowercase and the lowercase letters to uppercase.
'TESTING'.swapcase #=> testing
'testing'.swapcase #=> TESTING
-
2Thanks! This is exactly what I was looking for. A mixed case string might make it more obvious exactly what this method does...
'Testing'.swapcase #=> tESTING
– MatthewMay 29, 2019 at 19:38
You can find strings method like "strings".methods
You can define string as upcase
, downcase
, titleize
.
For Example,
"hii".downcase
"hii".titleize
"hii".upcase
Since Ruby 2.4 there is a built in full Unicode case mapping. Source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/38016153/888294. See Ruby 2.4.0 documentation for details: https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.4.0/String.html#method-i-downcase
Won't work for every, but this just saved me a bunch of time. I just had the problem with a CSV returning "TRUE or "FALSE" so I just added VALUE.to_s.downcase == "true" which will return the boolean true if the value is "TRUE" and false if the value is "FALSE", but will still work for the boolean true and false.
In combination with try
method, to support nil
value:
'string'.try(:upcase)
'string'.try(:capitalize)
'string'.try(:titleize)