How can I convert a mixed case string to a lowercase string in C?
6 Answers
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);
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41
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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)– EarlzApr 18, 2010 at 10:05
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1this gives me a segfault if str is a
char *
, but not if str is a char array. Got any explanation for that? Nov 22, 2016 at 22:07 -
4I believe the one liner will cause you to lose your pointer to the string.– Ace.CSep 8, 2017 at 19:55
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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;
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7To make it slightly more readable you could do
for(char *p = pstr;*p;++p) *p=*p>='A'&&*p<='Z'?*p|0x60:*p;
Apr 18, 2010 at 10:54 -
8This version is actually slower than glibc's
tolower()
. 55.2 vs. 44.15 on my machine.– jfsApr 18, 2010 at 18:10 -
i can't imagine that: tolower() deals with chars; only if it's macro Apr 18, 2010 at 18:37
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1@oraz: tolower() has
int (*)(int)
signature. Here's the code used for performance measurements gist.github.com/370497– jfsApr 18, 2010 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;} Apr 18, 2010 at 20:27
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;
}
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Well if you're going the one-liner way, then
s
is a local variable in your function, you can directly use it instead of declaringp
.`– NewbiZMar 8 at 2:32
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.
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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 SMay 22, 2013 at 21:26
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1
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Can you elaborate more? When I read about tolower(), they all mention that they only work on characters that have a lowercase character defined for them. From opengroup.org: "If the argument of tolower() represents an uppercase letter, and there exists a corresponding lowercase letter [CX] [Option Start] (as defined by character type information in the program locale category LC_CTYPE ), [Option End] the result shall be the corresponding lowercase letter. All other arguments in the domain are returned unchanged." If this is the case, where does tolower() fail?– 9a3eediMar 21 at 11:20
Are you just dealing with ASCII strings, and have no locale issues? Then yes, that would be a good way to do it.
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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? Apr 18, 2010 at 10:29
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1@hatorade:
tolower()
leaves argument unchanged if it is not in 'A'..'Z' range.– jfsApr 18, 2010 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) Nov 23, 2012 at 12:31
strlwr((char*)str);
It just goes through the string and converts it itself.