82

Is there a other version to make the first letter of each string capital and also with FALSE for flac perl?

name<-"hallo"
gsub("(^[[:alpha:]])", "\\U\\1", name, perl=TRUE)
5
  • Is it always just one word? This might help - How to convert a vector of strings to Title Case. See answer by @mnel
    – zx8754
    Aug 29, 2013 at 11:28
  • 4
    The examples in toupper might be useful, e.g. .simpleCap
    – Henrik
    Aug 29, 2013 at 11:28
  • @Henrik that capitalizes every word. Aug 29, 2013 at 11:37
  • @zx8754 I cant see a solution with perl flac FALSE
    – Klaus
    Aug 29, 2013 at 11:53
  • @SimonO101, perhaps I misunderstood what Klaus ment by "each string".
    – Henrik
    Aug 29, 2013 at 11:55

7 Answers 7

116

You can try something like:

name<-"hallo"
paste(toupper(substr(name, 1, 1)), substr(name, 2, nchar(name)), sep="")

Or another way is to have a function like:

firstup <- function(x) {
  substr(x, 1, 1) <- toupper(substr(x, 1, 1))
  x
}

Examples:

firstup("abcd")
## [1] Abcd

firstup(c("hello", "world"))
## [1] "Hello" "World"
3
  • This I also watched out but it looks not so flexible if something will change later
    – Klaus
    Aug 29, 2013 at 11:54
  • 23
    @Klaus but it exactly answers the question you posted. It is really bad form to change the parameters of the question after someone has posted a working answer. Not cool/fair! Ask a new question. Aug 29, 2013 at 11:57
  • 2
    Also sometimes it will be necessary to have all other chars except first in lower case. So, adding "x <- tolower(x)" will be useful
    – Andrii
    Sep 27, 2018 at 15:13
80

As pointed out in the comment, it is now possible to do: stringr::str_to_title("iwejofwe asdFf FFFF")

stringr uses stringi under the hood which takes care of complex internationalization, unicode, etc., you can do: stri_trans_totitle("kaCk, DSJAIDO, Sasdd.", opts_brkiter = stri_opts_brkiter(type = "sentence"))

There is a C or C++ library underneath stringi.

2
  • 15
    Now there is a stringr wrapper: str_to_title
    – fikovnik
    Apr 28, 2017 at 10:07
  • 2
    This does not answer the question, as str_to_title converts every letter in the string to lowercase, except the first letter of each word. E.g., str_to_title("AB ABC abc") returns Ab Abc Abc. So, among other things, it destroys acronyms.
    – Antoine
    May 27, 2023 at 14:37
35

In stringr, there's str_to_sentence() which does something similar. Not quite an answer to this question, but it solves the problem I had.

str_to_sentence(c("not today judas", "i love cats", "other Caps converteD to lower though"))
#> [1] "Not today judas"  "I love cats"  "Other caps converted to lower though"  
2
  • 2
    Can't understand why this was downvoted. Exactly what I was looking for. Upvoted it.
    – TobiSonne
    Jul 17, 2020 at 15:43
  • 3
    Problem with str_to_sentence is that it will turn eg: EFFG-1 to Effg-1 while str_replace(input, "^\\w{1}", toupper) keeps the original structure if multiple letters are uppercase. For eg gene names this is a better solution. Feb 19, 2022 at 13:12
19

for the lazy typer:

  paste0(toupper(substr(name, 1, 1)), substr(name, 2, nchar(name)))

will do too.

4
  • 2
    If by “super lazy” you mean “knows that paste0(x) exists and is equivalent to paste(x, sep = '')”. Sep 24, 2015 at 10:27
  • @KonradRudolph you are 100% right -> With lazy i mean just less code to type and maintain. (can make quite a difference if you start concatenating code into one Functional Programming line - like I do a lot - ) :^)
    – irJvV
    Sep 24, 2015 at 12:50
  • And paste0 is faster.
    – RHA
    Oct 23, 2015 at 8:47
  • This answers the question and uses base R. Should be the accepted answer IMO.
    – Antoine
    May 27, 2023 at 14:41
10

I like the "tidyverse" way using stringr with a oneliner

library(stringr)
input <- c("this", "is", "a", "test")
str_replace(input, "^\\w{1}", toupper)

Resulting in:

[1] "This" "Is"   "A"    "Test"
8

Often we want only the first letter upper case, rest of the string lower case. In such scenario, we need to convert the whole string to lower case first.

Inspired by @alko989 answer, the function will be:

firstup <- function(x) {
  x <- tolower(x)
  substr(x, 1, 1) <- toupper(substr(x, 1, 1))
  x
}

Examples:

firstup("ABCD")
## [1] Abcd

Another option is to use str_to_title in stringr package

dog <- "The quick brown dog"    
str_to_title(dog)
## [1] "The Quick Brown Dog"
3

I was also looking for the answer on this, but the replies did not consider the case of strings starting with numbers or symbols. Also, the question was: "make the first letter of each string capital", not every word.

v = c("123.1 test test", "test", "test test", ". test")
stringr::str_replace(v, "([[:alpha:]])", toupper)
## [1] "123.1 Test test" "Test"            "Test test"       ". Test"  

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