223

I am aware .capitalize() capitalizes the first letter of a string but what if the first character is a integer?

this

1bob
5sandy

to this

1Bob
5Sandy
0

10 Answers 10

298

Only because no one else has mentioned it:

>>> 'bob'.title()
'Bob'
>>> 'sandy'.title()
'Sandy'
>>> '1bob'.title()
'1Bob'
>>> '1sandy'.title()
'1Sandy'

However, this would also give

>>> '1bob sandy'.title()
'1Bob Sandy'
>>> '1JoeBob'.title()
'1Joebob'

i.e. it doesn't just capitalize the first alphabetic character. But then .capitalize() has the same issue, at least in that 'joe Bob'.capitalize() == 'Joe bob', so meh.

0
258

If the first character is an integer, it will not capitalize the first letter.

>>> '2s'.capitalize()
'2s'

If you want the functionality, strip off the digits, you can use '2'.isdigit() to check for each character.

>>> s = '123sa'
>>> for i, c in enumerate(s):
...     if not c.isdigit():
...         break
... 
>>> s[:i] + s[i:].capitalize()
'123Sa'
9
  • 5
    and that is what this answer does, pretty much
    – njzk2
    Sep 13, 2012 at 16:00
  • 17
    I would use if c.isalpha() rather than if not c.isdigit()
    – njzk2
    Sep 13, 2012 at 16:01
  • 1
    @Jan-PhilipGehrcke that is an exercise for the reader. You can see in that case, s is never empty, it is always '123sa' :D
    – Ali Afshar
    Sep 13, 2012 at 16:02
  • 2
    @Jan-PhilipGehrcke: in which case, next((i for i,e in enumerate(test) if not e.isdigit()), '0') solves it for the empty string case
    – njzk2
    Oct 1, 2014 at 22:19
  • 7
    This answer is not correct. . capitalize will also transform other chars to lower. From official docs: "Return a titlecased version of S, i.e. words start with title case characters, all remaining cased characters have lower case."
    – karantan
    Jan 3, 2017 at 11:34
41

This is similar to @Anon's answer in that it keeps the rest of the string's case intact, without the need for the re module.

def sliceindex(x):
    i = 0
    for c in x:
        if c.isalpha():
            i = i + 1
            return i
        i = i + 1

def upperfirst(x):
    i = sliceindex(x)
    return x[:i].upper() + x[i:]

x = '0thisIsCamelCase'

y = upperfirst(x)

print(y)
# 0ThisIsCamelCase

As @Xan pointed out, the function could use more error checking (such as checking that x is a sequence - however I'm omitting edge cases to illustrate the technique)

Updated per @normanius comment (thanks!)

Thanks to @GeoStoneMarten in pointing out I didn't answer the question! -fixed that

5
  • 2
    Very useful, but needs a len(x) == 0 branch.
    – Xan
    Sep 13, 2015 at 21:07
  • since python 2.5 the empty case can still be handled on one line: return x[0].upper() + x[1:] if len(x) > 0 else x
    – danio
    Jun 13, 2016 at 10:25
  • Very useful answer, because capitalize & title first lowercase the whole string and then uppercase only the first letter. Nov 14, 2016 at 10:16
  • 7
    Useful. Just use a[:1].upper() + a[1:], this will take care of the len(X)==0 corner case.
    – normanius
    Mar 16, 2018 at 9:47
  • 1
    Good job but don't work for this case because this function capitalize only first caracter and le first caracter is digit not text. You need split numeric and digit before use and join result in this case. Apr 25, 2018 at 10:10
22

Here is a one-liner that will uppercase the first letter and leave the case of all subsequent letters:

import re

key = 'wordsWithOtherUppercaseLetters'
key = re.sub('([a-zA-Z])', lambda x: x.groups()[0].upper(), key, 1)
print key

This will result in WordsWithOtherUppercaseLetters

1
  • This is enormously more efficient than the top-voted answer
    – Clément
    Jun 25, 2022 at 0:26
8

As seeing here answered by Chen Houwu, it's possible to use string package:

import string
string.capwords("they're bill's friends from the UK")
>>>"They're Bill's Friends From The Uk"
1
  • 1
    How to just capitalise the first letter in the first word? Aug 28, 2021 at 5:18
7

a one-liner: ' '.join(sub[:1].upper() + sub[1:] for sub in text.split(' '))

0
2

You can replace the first letter (preceded by a digit) of each word using regex:

re.sub(r'(\d\w)', lambda w: w.group().upper(), '1bob 5sandy')

output:
 1Bob 5Sandy
2
def solve(s):
    for i in s[:].split():
        s = s.replace(i, i.capitalize())
    return s

This is the actual code for work. .title() will not work at '12name' case

1

I came up with this:

import re

regex = re.compile("[A-Za-z]") # find a alpha
str = "1st str"
s = regex.search(str).group() # find the first alpha
str = str.replace(s, s.upper(), 1) # replace only 1 instance
print str
0
0
def solve(s):

names = list(s.split(" "))
return " ".join([i.capitalize() for i in names])

Takes a input like your name: john doe

Returns the first letter capitalized.(if first character is a number, then no capitalization occurs)

works for any name length

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