332

Example:

>>> convert('CamelCase')
'camel_case'
4
  • 28
    To convert in the other direction, see this other stackoverflow question.
    – Nathan
    Sep 30, 2011 at 21:30
  • 10
    n.b. that's NotCamelCase but thisIs Jun 23, 2014 at 15:59
  • 5
    @MattRichards It is a matter of dispute. wiki Aug 5, 2015 at 10:38
  • @MattRichards For example in Java they use both, CamelCase is used for naming Class definitions, while camelCase is used for naming initialized variables.
    – darkless
    Feb 4, 2017 at 0:57

29 Answers 29

1155

Camel case to snake case

import re

name = 'CamelCaseName'
name = re.sub(r'(?<!^)(?=[A-Z])', '_', name).lower()
print(name)  # camel_case_name

If you do this many times and the above is slow, compile the regex beforehand:

pattern = re.compile(r'(?<!^)(?=[A-Z])')
name = pattern.sub('_', name).lower()

To handle more advanced cases specially (this is not reversible anymore):

def camel_to_snake(name):
    name = re.sub('(.)([A-Z][a-z]+)', r'\1_\2', name)
    return re.sub('([a-z0-9])([A-Z])', r'\1_\2', name).lower()

print(camel_to_snake('camel2_camel2_case'))  # camel2_camel2_case
print(camel_to_snake('getHTTPResponseCode'))  # get_http_response_code
print(camel_to_snake('HTTPResponseCodeXYZ'))  # http_response_code_xyz

To add also cases with two underscores or more:

def to_snake_case(name):
    name = re.sub('(.)([A-Z][a-z]+)', r'\1_\2', name)
    name = re.sub('__([A-Z])', r'_\1', name)
    name = re.sub('([a-z0-9])([A-Z])', r'\1_\2', name)
    return name.lower()

Snake case to pascal case

name = 'snake_case_name'
name = ''.join(word.title() for word in name.split('_'))
print(name)  # SnakeCaseName
21
  • 3
    This solution fails in these cases: _test_Method, __test__Method, _Test, getHTTPresponseCode, __CamelCase, and _Camel_Case.
    – freegnu
    May 16, 2011 at 14:12
  • 8
    how about the reverse? Convert a not_camel_case to notCamelCase and/or NotCamelCase?
    – john2x
    Aug 14, 2011 at 22:59
  • 13
    To avoid double underscores when converting e.g. camel_Case, add this line: s2.replace('__', '_') Aug 13, 2013 at 11:15
  • 4
    @AnmolSinghJaggi The first regex handles the edge case of an acronym followed by another word (e.g. "HTTPResponse" -> "HTTP_Response") OR the more normal case of an initial lowercase word followed by a capitalized word (e.g. "getResponse" -> "get_Response". The second regex handles the normal case of two non-acronyms (e.g. "ResponseCode" -> "Response_Code") followed by a final call to lowercase everything. Thus "getHTTPResponseCode" -> "getHTTP_ResponseCode" -> "get_HTTP_Response_Code" -> "get_http_response_code"
    – Jeff Moser
    Apr 19, 2016 at 15:12
  • 5
    convert = lambda name: re.sub('((?!^)(?<!_)[A-Z][a-z]+|(?<=[a-z0-9])[A-Z])', r'_\1', name).lower() - This handles freegnu's cases correctly.
    – cco
    Oct 29, 2016 at 2:12
301

There's an inflection library in the package index that can handle these things for you. In this case, you'd be looking for inflection.underscore():

>>> inflection.underscore('CamelCase')
'camel_case'
18
  • 68
    I dont understand why people are up voting the use of custom functions when there is a great library that performs this task. We should not be reinventing the wheel.
    – oden
    Jul 5, 2015 at 3:26
  • 182
    @oden Maybe because adding an entire new dependency to do the job of a single-line function is fragile over-kill? Dec 21, 2015 at 6:23
  • 22
    For one instance, sure it's overkill. Across a larger application, no need to reinvent and obfuscate the wheel.
    – Brad Koch
    Dec 21, 2015 at 22:47
  • 19
    Regexes back a lot into a "single line", which is why it's lot more than one line with proper testing.
    – studgeek
    May 10, 2017 at 16:38
  • 33
    @CecilCurry: I'm sure you're a great programmer, but I'm not sure there aren't cases that you haven't considered—just look at other answers here for examples. That's why I'll always choose a library, because it's the sum experience of many more devs than just me. Sep 27, 2018 at 14:55
156

I don't know why these are all so complicating.

for most cases, the simple expression ([A-Z]+) will do the trick

>>> re.sub('([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','CamelCase').lower()
'_camel_case'  
>>> re.sub('([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','camelCase').lower()
'camel_case'
>>> re.sub('([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','camel2Case2').lower()
'camel2_case2'
>>> re.sub('([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','camelCamelCase').lower()
'camel_camel_case'
>>> re.sub('([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','getHTTPResponseCode').lower()
'get_httpresponse_code'

To ignore the first character simply add look behind (?!^)

>>> re.sub('(?!^)([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','CamelCase').lower()
'camel_case'
>>> re.sub('(?!^)([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','CamelCamelCase').lower()
'camel_camel_case'
>>> re.sub('(?!^)([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','Camel2Camel2Case').lower()
'camel2_camel2_case'
>>> re.sub('(?!^)([A-Z]+)', r'_\1','getHTTPResponseCode').lower()
'get_httpresponse_code'

If you want to separate ALLCaps to all_caps and expect numbers in your string you still don't need to do two separate runs just use | This expression ((?<=[a-z0-9])[A-Z]|(?!^)[A-Z](?=[a-z])) can handle just about every scenario in the book

>>> a = re.compile('((?<=[a-z0-9])[A-Z]|(?!^)[A-Z](?=[a-z]))')
>>> a.sub(r'_\1', 'getHTTPResponseCode').lower()
'get_http_response_code'
>>> a.sub(r'_\1', 'get2HTTPResponseCode').lower()
'get2_http_response_code'
>>> a.sub(r'_\1', 'get2HTTPResponse123Code').lower()
'get2_http_response123_code'
>>> a.sub(r'_\1', 'HTTPResponseCode').lower()
'http_response_code'
>>> a.sub(r'_\1', 'HTTPResponseCodeXYZ').lower()
'http_response_code_xyz'

It all depends on what you want so use the solution that best suits your needs as it should not be overly complicated.

nJoy!

4
  • 1
    The last iteration is the most clever, IMO. It took me a little bit to understand that it's only replacing the single character at the beginning of each word -- and that was only because the approach was different than one I'd come up with myself. Nicely done. Jun 30, 2014 at 12:23
  • 4
    I was puzzled by the (?!^) expression being called a look-behind. Unless I'm missing something, what we really want here is a negative look-behind which should be expressed as (?<!^). For reasons I cannot understand your negative look-ahead (?!^) seems to work, too...
    – Apteryx
    Jul 8, 2016 at 19:28
  • 11
    This doesn't handle preexisting underscores well: "Camel2WARNING_Case_CASE" becomes "camel2_warning_case__case". You can add a (?<!_) negative lookbehind, to solve it: re.sub('((?<=[a-z0-9])[A-Z]|(?!^)(?<!_)[A-Z](?=[a-z]))', r'_\1', "Camel2WARNING_Case_CASE").lower() returns 'camel2_warning_case_case' Jun 20, 2017 at 12:55
  • 3
    @Apteryx You're right, (?!^) was incorrectly called a "look behind" and should have instead been called a negative lookahead assertion. As this nice explanation shows, negative lookaheads usually come after the expression you're searching for. So you can think of (?!^) as "find '' where <start of string> does not follow". Indeed, a negative lookbehind also works: you can think of (?<!^) as "find '' where <start of string> does not precede". Jan 9, 2019 at 18:42
89

Avoiding libraries and regular expressions:

def camel_to_snake(s):
    return ''.join(['_'+c.lower() if c.isupper() else c for c in s]).lstrip('_')
>>> camel_to_snake('ThisIsMyString')
'this_is_my_string'
8
  • 8
    This is the most compact one which avoids using the re library and doing the stuff only in one line only using built-in str.methods! It is similar to this answer, but avoids using slicing and additional if ... else by simply stripping potentially added "_" as first character. I like this most.
    – colidyre
    Mar 7, 2020 at 1:00
  • 4
    For accepted answer 6.81 µs ± 22.5 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000 loops each) but for this response 2.51 µs ± 25.5 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000 loops each) which is 2.5x times faster! Love this!
    – WBAR
    Mar 20, 2020 at 17:10
  • 5
    this will convert acronyms like "MultinomialNB" to "multinomal_n_b" instead of "multinomial_nb.
    – s2t2
    Sep 6, 2020 at 0:33
  • 2
    URL -> u_r_l, HTTP -> h_t_t_p (I realize I'm piling on a bit here but ...)
    – 0xbe5077ed
    Dec 17, 2020 at 16:17
  • 1
    @WBAR it might be faster but there are tons of case it doesn't handle... examples: HIThereHOWIsItGoing, how_are_YoU_TeST. Though I agree it does do regular camel case to snake case well enough
    – rv.kvetch
    Jul 27, 2021 at 6:27
43

stringcase is my go-to library for this; e.g.:

>>> from stringcase import pascalcase, snakecase
>>> snakecase('FooBarBaz')
'foo_bar_baz'
>>> pascalcase('foo_bar_baz')
'FooBarBaz'
6
  • For hello world it will add double _ as hello__world that is not good May 26, 2021 at 16:45
  • 1
    @GonzaloGarcia this is incorrect: stringcase.snakecase('hello world') returns 'hello_world' (one underscore)
    – Beau
    May 26, 2021 at 17:05
  • sorry, if the string is hello world it will add double _ May 26, 2021 at 19:13
  • 1
    it's up to the user to pass correct arguments to the library :)
    – Beau
    May 27, 2021 at 2:42
  • 3
    double underscores are commonly used in Python; your "better" is someone else's "worse"; if you want a library with different semantics you can use one; your criticism is not part of the original question which is about CamelCase, not spaces
    – Beau
    May 29, 2021 at 7:05
13

I think this solution is more straightforward than previous answers:

import re

def convert (camel_input):
    words = re.findall(r'[A-Z]?[a-z]+|[A-Z]{2,}(?=[A-Z][a-z]|\d|\W|$)|\d+', camel_input)
    return '_'.join(map(str.lower, words))


# Let's test it
test_strings = [
    'CamelCase',
    'camelCamelCase',
    'Camel2Camel2Case',
    'getHTTPResponseCode',
    'get200HTTPResponseCode',
    'getHTTP200ResponseCode',
    'HTTPResponseCode',
    'ResponseHTTP',
    'ResponseHTTP2',
    'Fun?!awesome',
    'Fun?!Awesome',
    '10CoolDudes',
    '20coolDudes'
]
for test_string in test_strings:
    print(convert(test_string))

Which outputs:

camel_case
camel_camel_case
camel_2_camel_2_case
get_http_response_code
get_200_http_response_code
get_http_200_response_code
http_response_code
response_http
response_http_2
fun_awesome
fun_awesome
10_cool_dudes
20_cool_dudes

The regular expression matches three patterns:

  1. [A-Z]?[a-z]+: Consecutive lower-case letters that optionally start with an upper-case letter.
  2. [A-Z]{2,}(?=[A-Z][a-z]|\d|\W|$): Two or more consecutive upper-case letters. It uses a lookahead to exclude the last upper-case letter if it is followed by a lower-case letter.
  3. \d+: Consecutive numbers.

By using re.findall we get a list of individual "words" that can be converted to lower-case and joined with underscores.

6
  • 1
    There is a good example here to get the Numerics tokenized independantly.
    – math_law
    Apr 30, 2018 at 15:34
  • 4
    Broken: convert("aB") -> 'a'
    – adw
    Dec 2, 2019 at 11:03
  • 1
    @adw This regex covers that case: r"[A-Z]?[a-z]+|[A-Z]{2,}(?=[A-Z][a-z]|\d|\W|$)|\d+|[A-Z]{2,}|[A-Z]$"
    – abstrus
    Mar 10, 2021 at 4:18
  • this works and it's actually the fastest version i could find in this thread tbh. the version in the comments supports all remaining edge cases too i think.
    – rv.kvetch
    Jun 5, 2022 at 13:43
  • actually, I spoke too soon. does anyone know a regex that can handle words like H@Y, H@y, WhaTSuP!, or B!KE?
    – rv.kvetch
    Jun 5, 2022 at 14:45
8

Personally I am not sure how anything using regular expressions in python can be described as elegant. Most answers here are just doing "code golf" type RE tricks. Elegant coding is supposed to be easily understood.

def to_snake_case(not_snake_case):
    final = ''
    for i in xrange(len(not_snake_case)):
        item = not_snake_case[i]
        if i < len(not_snake_case) - 1:
            next_char_will_be_underscored = (
                not_snake_case[i+1] == "_" or
                not_snake_case[i+1] == " " or
                not_snake_case[i+1].isupper()
            )
        if (item == " " or item == "_") and next_char_will_be_underscored:
            continue
        elif (item == " " or item == "_"):
            final += "_"
        elif item.isupper():
            final += "_"+item.lower()
        else:
            final += item
    if final[0] == "_":
        final = final[1:]
    return final

>>> to_snake_case("RegularExpressionsAreFunky")
'regular_expressions_are_funky'

>>> to_snake_case("RegularExpressionsAre Funky")
'regular_expressions_are_funky'

>>> to_snake_case("RegularExpressionsAre_Funky")
'regular_expressions_are_funky'
8
  • 2
    += on strings is almost always a bad idea. Append to a list and ''.join() it in the end. Or in this case, simply join it with an underscore... Sep 25, 2015 at 11:53
  • 39
    How is a single-line regular expression not innately superior in just about every practical way (including readability) to inefficient multi-line character iteration and brute-force string munging? Python provides regular expression support out-of-the-box for a reason. Dec 21, 2015 at 6:26
  • 1
    @CecilCurry - Regular expressions are VERY complex. See the compiler and parser that Python uses: svn.python.org/projects/python/trunk/Lib/sre_compile.py & svn.python.org/projects/python/trunk/Lib/sre_parse.py -- Simple string manipulation like this likely much faster than an RE doing the same. Feb 27, 2017 at 19:26
  • 7
    "For simple tasks, always prefer simple functions" is definitely good advice, but this answer is neither a simple function nor an elegant one. Regex might be slower, but defaulting to a complicated function like this (that is ALSO untested and has numerous potential points of error) is completely premature optimization
    – kevlarr
    Sep 4, 2018 at 14:31
  • 2
    I'm sorry but this function is very hard to read compared to a simple regex.
    – mjuopperi
    Nov 1, 2021 at 9:40
7
''.join('_'+c.lower() if c.isupper() else c for c in "DeathToCamelCase").strip('_')
re.sub("(.)([A-Z])", r'\1_\2', 'DeathToCamelCase').lower()
4

Here's my solution:

def un_camel(text):
    """ Converts a CamelCase name into an under_score name. 

        >>> un_camel('CamelCase')
        'camel_case'
        >>> un_camel('getHTTPResponseCode')
        'get_http_response_code'
    """
    result = []
    pos = 0
    while pos < len(text):
        if text[pos].isupper():
            if pos-1 > 0 and text[pos-1].islower() or pos-1 > 0 and \
            pos+1 < len(text) and text[pos+1].islower():
                result.append("_%s" % text[pos].lower())
            else:
                result.append(text[pos].lower())
        else:
            result.append(text[pos])
        pos += 1
    return "".join(result)

It supports those corner cases discussed in the comments. For instance, it'll convert getHTTPResponseCode to get_http_response_code like it should.

4
  • 7
    -1 because this is very complicated compared to using regexps. Jul 24, 2009 at 9:43
  • 10
    EOL, I'm sure plenty of non-regexp people would think otherwise. Jul 24, 2009 at 15:01
  • This solution fails in these cases: _Method, _test_Method, __test__Method, getHTTPrespnseCode, __get_HTTPresponseCode, _Camel_Case, _Test, and _test_Method.
    – freegnu
    May 16, 2011 at 14:16
  • 3
    @Evan, those people would be bad programmers. Jul 23, 2011 at 9:14
4

I don't get idea why using both .sub() calls? :) I'm not regex guru, but I simplified function to this one, which is suitable for my certain needs, I just needed a solution to convert camelCasedVars from POST request to vars_with_underscore:

def myFunc(...):
  return re.sub('(.)([A-Z]{1})', r'\1_\2', "iTriedToWriteNicely").lower()

It does not work with such names like getHTTPResponse, cause I heard it is bad naming convention (should be like getHttpResponse, it's obviously, that it's much easier memorize this form).

2
  • I forgot to mention, that '{1}' is not needed, but sometimes it help clarify some mist.
    – desper4do
    Nov 13, 2012 at 16:22
  • 2
    -1: this just doesn't work. Try with for example with 'HTTPConnectionFactory', your code produces 'h_tt_pconnection_factory', code from accepted answer produces 'http_connection_factory'
    – vartec
    May 23, 2013 at 9:57
3

For the fun of it:

>>> def un_camel(input):
...     output = [input[0].lower()]
...     for c in input[1:]:
...             if c in ('ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'):
...                     output.append('_')
...                     output.append(c.lower())
...             else:
...                     output.append(c)
...     return str.join('', output)
...
>>> un_camel("camel_case")
'camel_case'
>>> un_camel("CamelCase")
'camel_case'

Or, more for the fun of it:

>>> un_camel = lambda i: i[0].lower() + str.join('', ("_" + c.lower() if c in "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" else c for c in i[1:]))
>>> un_camel("camel_case")
'camel_case'
>>> un_camel("CamelCase")
'camel_case'
8
  • 3
    c.isupper() rather than c in ABCEF...Z
    – Jimmy
    Jul 24, 2009 at 1:30
  • 1
    Python doesn't have regexes? A quick 's/[a-z]\K([A-Z][a-z])/_\L$1/g; lc $_' in Perl does the job (although it does not handle getHTTPResponseCode well; but that's expected, that should be named getHttpResponseCode)
    – jrockway
    Jul 24, 2009 at 1:34
  • 5
    str.join has been deprecated for ages. Use ''.join(..) instead.
    – John Fouhy
    Jul 24, 2009 at 1:49
  • jrockway: It does have regular expressions, via the "re" module. It shouldn't be too difficult to make this work using regex rather than the approaches posted here. Jul 24, 2009 at 1:52
  • Python noob here, but why return str.join('', output)? Just to create a copy?
    – Tarks
    Jul 24, 2009 at 2:00
3

Using regexes may be the shortest, but this solution is way more readable:

def to_snake_case(s):
    snake = "".join(["_"+c.lower() if c.isupper() else c for c in s])
    return snake[1:] if snake.startswith("_") else snake
2
  • @blueyed that's completely unrelated, this question has nothing to do with django.
    – 3k-
    Apr 20, 2015 at 9:51
  • It's just an example, like HTTPResponseCode, which is handled by stackoverflow.com/a/23561109/15690.
    – blueyed
    Apr 22, 2015 at 19:43
2

This is not a elegant method, is a very 'low level' implementation of a simple state machine (bitfield state machine), possibly the most anti pythonic mode to resolve this, however re module also implements a too complex state machine to resolve this simple task, so i think this is a good solution.

def splitSymbol(s):
    si, ci, state = 0, 0, 0 # start_index, current_index 
    '''
        state bits:
        0: no yields
        1: lower yields
        2: lower yields - 1
        4: upper yields
        8: digit yields
        16: other yields
        32 : upper sequence mark
    '''
    for c in s:

        if c.islower():
            if state & 1:
                yield s[si:ci]
                si = ci
            elif state & 2:
                yield s[si:ci - 1]
                si = ci - 1
            state = 4 | 8 | 16
            ci += 1

        elif c.isupper():
            if state & 4:
                yield s[si:ci]
                si = ci
            if state & 32:
                state = 2 | 8 | 16 | 32
            else:
                state = 8 | 16 | 32

            ci += 1

        elif c.isdigit():
            if state & 8:
                yield s[si:ci]
                si = ci
            state = 1 | 4 | 16
            ci += 1

        else:
            if state & 16:
                yield s[si:ci]
            state = 0
            ci += 1  # eat ci
            si = ci   
        print(' : ', c, bin(state))
    if state:
        yield s[si:ci] 


def camelcaseToUnderscore(s):
    return '_'.join(splitSymbol(s)) 

splitsymbol can parses all case types: UpperSEQUENCEInterleaved, under_score, BIG_SYMBOLS and cammelCasedMethods

I hope it is useful

1
  • 1
    Hideous, but it runs about 3x faster than the regex method on my machine. :)
    – jdiaz5513
    Mar 16, 2014 at 6:55
2

Take a look at the excellent Schematics lib

https://github.com/schematics/schematics

It allows you to created typed data structures that can serialize/deserialize from python to Javascript flavour, eg:

class MapPrice(Model):
    price_before_vat = DecimalType(serialized_name='priceBeforeVat')
    vat_rate = DecimalType(serialized_name='vatRate')
    vat = DecimalType()
    total_price = DecimalType(serialized_name='totalPrice')
2

So many complicated methods... Just find all "Titled" group and join its lower cased variant with underscore.

>>> import re
>>> def camel_to_snake(string):
...     groups = re.findall('([A-z0-9][a-z]*)', string)
...     return '_'.join([i.lower() for i in groups])
...
>>> camel_to_snake('ABCPingPongByTheWay2KWhereIsOurBorderlands3???')
'a_b_c_ping_pong_by_the_way_2_k_where_is_our_borderlands_3'

If you don't want make numbers like first character of group or separate group - you can use ([A-z][a-z0-9]*) mask.

1

A horrendous example using regular expressions (you could easily clean this up :) ):

def f(s):
    return s.group(1).lower() + "_" + s.group(2).lower()

p = re.compile("([A-Z]+[a-z]+)([A-Z]?)")
print p.sub(f, "CamelCase")
print p.sub(f, "getHTTPResponseCode")

Works for getHTTPResponseCode though!

Alternatively, using lambda:

p = re.compile("([A-Z]+[a-z]+)([A-Z]?)")
print p.sub(lambda x: x.group(1).lower() + "_" + x.group(2).lower(), "CamelCase")
print p.sub(lambda x: x.group(1).lower() + "_" + x.group(2).lower(), "getHTTPResponseCode")

EDIT: It should also be pretty easy to see that there's room for improvement for cases like "Test", because the underscore is unconditionally inserted.

1

Lightely adapted from https://stackoverflow.com/users/267781/matth who use generators.

def uncamelize(s):
    buff, l = '', []
    for ltr in s:
        if ltr.isupper():
            if buff:
                l.append(buff)
                buff = ''
        buff += ltr
    l.append(buff)
    return '_'.join(l).lower()
1

This simple method should do the job:

import re

def convert(name):
    return re.sub(r'([A-Z]*)([A-Z][a-z]+)', lambda x: (x.group(1) + '_' if x.group(1) else '') + x.group(2) + '_', name).rstrip('_').lower()
  • We look for capital letters that are precedeed by any number of (or zero) capital letters, and followed by any number of lowercase characters.
  • An underscore is placed just before the occurence of the last capital letter found in the group, and one can be placed before that capital letter in case it is preceded by other capital letters.
  • If there are trailing underscores, remove those.
  • Finally, the whole result string is changed to lower case.

(taken from here, see working example online)

1
  • This is an answer for the opposite question (how to convert to camel case).
    – Justin
    Apr 12, 2016 at 18:00
0

Here's something I did to change the headers on a tab-delimited file. I'm omitting the part where I only edited the first line of the file. You could adapt it to Python pretty easily with the re library. This also includes separating out numbers (but keeps the digits together). I did it in two steps because that was easier than telling it not to put an underscore at the start of a line or tab.

Step One...find uppercase letters or integers preceded by lowercase letters, and precede them with an underscore:

Search:

([a-z]+)([A-Z]|[0-9]+)

Replacement:

\1_\l\2/

Step Two...take the above and run it again to convert all caps to lowercase:

Search:

([A-Z])

Replacement (that's backslash, lowercase L, backslash, one):

\l\1
0

I was looking for a solution to the same problem, except that I needed a chain; e.g.

"CamelCamelCamelCase" -> "Camel-camel-camel-case"

Starting from the nice two-word solutions here, I came up with the following:

"-".join(x.group(1).lower() if x.group(2) is None else x.group(1) \
         for x in re.finditer("((^.[^A-Z]+)|([A-Z][^A-Z]+))", "stringToSplit"))

Most of the complicated logic is to avoid lowercasing the first word. Here's a simpler version if you don't mind altering the first word:

"-".join(x.group(1).lower() for x in re.finditer("(^[^A-Z]+|[A-Z][^A-Z]+)", "stringToSplit"))

Of course, you can pre-compile the regular expressions or join with underscore instead of hyphen, as discussed in the other solutions.

0

Concise without regular expressions, but HTTPResponseCode=> httpresponse_code:

def from_camel(name):
    """
    ThisIsCamelCase ==> this_is_camel_case
    """
    name = name.replace("_", "")
    _cas = lambda _x : [_i.isupper() for _i in _x]
    seq = zip(_cas(name[1:-1]), _cas(name[2:]))
    ss = [_x + 1 for _x, (_i, _j) in enumerate(seq) if (_i, _j) == (False, True)]
    return "".join([ch + "_" if _x in ss else ch for _x, ch in numerate(name.lower())])
1
  • from_camel('removes_underscore') -> 'removesunderscore'
    – And0k
    Feb 7 at 13:24
0

Without any library :

def camelify(out):
    return (''.join(["_"+x.lower() if i<len(out)-1 and x.isupper() and out[i+1].islower()
         else x.lower()+"_" if i<len(out)-1 and x.islower() and out[i+1].isupper()
         else x.lower() for i,x in enumerate(list(out))])).lstrip('_').replace('__','_')

A bit heavy, but

CamelCamelCamelCase ->  camel_camel_camel_case
HTTPRequest         ->  http_request
GetHTTPRequest      ->  get_http_request
getHTTPRequest      ->  get_http_request
0

Very nice RegEx proposed on this site:

(?<!^)(?=[A-Z])

If python have a String Split method, it should work...

In Java:

String s = "loremIpsum";
words = s.split("(?&#60;!^)(?=[A-Z])");
1
  • Unfortunately, the Python regular expression module doesn't (as of version 3.6) support splitting on zero-length matches.
    – rspeed
    Oct 5, 2017 at 2:25
0

Just in case someone needs to transform a complete source file, here is a script that will do it.

# Copy and paste your camel case code in the string below
camelCaseCode ="""
    cv2.Matx33d ComputeZoomMatrix(const cv2.Point2d & zoomCenter, double zoomRatio)
    {
      auto mat = cv2.Matx33d::eye();
      mat(0, 0) = zoomRatio;
      mat(1, 1) = zoomRatio;
      mat(0, 2) = zoomCenter.x * (1. - zoomRatio);
      mat(1, 2) = zoomCenter.y * (1. - zoomRatio);
      return mat;
    }
"""

import re
def snake_case(name):
    s1 = re.sub('(.)([A-Z][a-z]+)', r'\1_\2', name)
    return re.sub('([a-z0-9])([A-Z])', r'\1_\2', s1).lower()

def lines(str):
    return str.split("\n")

def unlines(lst):
    return "\n".join(lst)

def words(str):
    return str.split(" ")

def unwords(lst):
    return " ".join(lst)

def map_partial(function):
    return lambda values : [  function(v) for v in values]

import functools
def compose(*functions):
    return functools.reduce(lambda f, g: lambda x: f(g(x)), functions, lambda x: x)

snake_case_code = compose(
    unlines ,
    map_partial(unwords),
    map_partial(map_partial(snake_case)),
    map_partial(words),
    lines
)
print(snake_case_code(camelCaseCode))
0

Wow I just stole this from django snippets. ref http://djangosnippets.org/snippets/585/

Pretty elegant

camelcase_to_underscore = lambda str: re.sub(r'(?<=[a-z])[A-Z]|[A-Z](?=[^A-Z])', r'_\g<0>', str).lower().strip('_')

Example:

camelcase_to_underscore('ThisUser')

Returns:

'this_user'

REGEX DEMO

3
  • 3
    Bad form using str as a local variable name.
    – freegnu
    May 16, 2011 at 12:06
  • This fails miserably if there are any underscores at the beginning or end of a string and if there are any underscores before a capital letter.
    – freegnu
    May 16, 2011 at 14:24
  • doesnt take into account numbers 😬
    – villy393
    Dec 10, 2019 at 12:23
-1
def convert(name):
    return reduce(
        lambda x, y: x + ('_' if y.isupper() else '') + y, 
        name
    ).lower()

And if we need to cover a case with already-un-cameled input:

def convert(name):
    return reduce(
        lambda x, y: x + ('_' if y.isupper() and not x.endswith('_') else '') + y, 
        name
    ).lower()
-1

If you use Google's (nearly) deterministic Camel case algorithm, then one does not need to handle things like HTMLDocument since it should be HtmlDocument, then this regex based approach is simple. It replace all capitals or numbers with an underscore. Note does not handle multi digit numbers.

import re

def to_snake_case(camel_str):
    return re.sub('([A-Z0-9])', r'_\1', camel_str).lower().lstrip('_')
-2
def convert(camel_str):
    temp_list = []
    for letter in camel_str:
        if letter.islower():
            temp_list.append(letter)
        else:
            temp_list.append('_')
            temp_list.append(letter)
    result = "".join(temp_list)
    return result.lower()
-5

Use: str.capitalize() to convert first letter of the string (contained in variable str) to a capital letter and returns the entire string.

Example: Command: "hello".capitalize() Output: Hello

1
  • This isn't related to the question - the OP wants CamelCase -> snake_case, not Capitalization.
    – Brad Koch
    Jul 8, 2016 at 17:32

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