How can I convert a mixed case string to a lowercase string in C?
It's in the standard library, and that's the most straight forward way I can see to implement such a function. So yes, just loop through the string and convert each character to lowercase.
Something trivial like this:
#include <ctype.h>
for(int i = 0; str[i]; i++){
str[i] = tolower(str[i]);
}
or if you prefer one liners, then you can use this one by J.F. Sebastian:
for ( ; *p; ++p) *p = tolower(*p);
-
37
-
14@J.F. there you go. Depends on if they want the code to look scary or nice :) (very readable one liner, but it does look scary) – Earlz Apr 18 '10 at 10:05
-
this gives me a segfault if str is a
char *
, but not if str is a char array. Got any explanation for that? – Electric Coffee Nov 22 '16 at 22:07 -
3I believe the one liner will cause you to lose your pointer to the string. – Ace.C Sep 8 '17 at 19:55
-
2
to convert to lower case is equivalent to rise bit 0x60 if you restrict yourself to ASCII:
for(char *p = pstr; *p; ++p)
*p = *p > 0x40 && *p < 0x5b ? *p | 0x60 : *p;
-
6To make it slightly more readable you could do
for(char *p = pstr;*p;++p) *p=*p>='A'&&*p<='Z'?*p|0x60:*p;
– Grant Peters Apr 18 '10 at 10:54 -
7This version is actually slower than glibc's
tolower()
. 55.2 vs. 44.15 on my machine. – jfs Apr 18 '10 at 18:10 -
i can't imagine that: tolower() deals with chars; only if it's macro – Oleg Razgulyaev Apr 18 '10 at 18:37
-
1@oraz: tolower() has
int (*)(int)
signature. Here's the code used for performance measurements gist.github.com/370497 – jfs Apr 18 '10 at 19:32 -
@J.F.: i see, they've used table, but i can optimize: for ( ; *p; ++p) if(*p > 'Z') {continue;} else if (*p < 'A') {continue;} else {*p = *p|0x60;} – Oleg Razgulyaev Apr 18 '10 at 20:27
Are you just dealing with ASCII strings, and have no locale issues? Then yes, that would be a good way to do it.
-
what happens if tolower() is called on a non-ascii a-z char? like '!' or '#'. i tested it on '#' and it seemed to work ok. is this generally true for all ascii chars that aren't letters a-z? – Tony Stark Apr 18 '10 at 10:29
-
1@hatorade:
tolower()
leaves argument unchanged if it is not in 'A'..'Z' range. – jfs Apr 18 '10 at 18:20 -
1! and # are both ascii chars. Mark was referring to other encodings like UTF8, where you can't assume that there is one byte per character (as this solution does) – hdgarrood Nov 23 '12 at 12:31
If you need Unicode support in the lower case function see this question: Light C Unicode Library
If we're going to be as sloppy as to use tolower()
, do this:
char blah[] = "blah blah Blah BLAH blAH\0"; int i=0; while(blah[i]|=' ', blah[++i]) {}
But, well, it kinda explodes if you feed it some symbols/numerals, and in general it's evil. Good interview question, though.
-
6Yeah, this will fold/spindle/mutilate a variety of symbols (in ASCII, any symbol, control character, or numeral with bit 5 clear will become the same character code with bit 5 set, etc) so really, seriously, don't use it. – Ken S May 22 '13 at 21:26
-
1
Looping the pointer to gain better performance:
#include <ctype.h>
char* toLower(char* s) {
for(char *p=s; *p; p++) *p=tolower(*p);
return s;
}
char* toUpper(char* s) {
for(char *p=s; *p; p++) *p=toupper(*p);
return s;
}
strlwr((char*)str);
It just goes through the string and converts it itself. – Larry Mar 1 '18 at 23:49