2

What is the idiomatic and most effecient way to check if a single character in Elisp is lowercase, uppercase, alphanumeric, digit, whitespace, or any other similar character category? For example Python has string methods like isdigit(), but converting a character (which is just a number) to a string in Elisp to check if it belongs to a certain case or category seems like a wrong approach:

(string-match-p "[[:lower:]]" (char-to-string ?a))
1
  • char-syntax should be pretty efficient, but it's not wrapped as nicely as you'd like.
    – abo-abo
    Jan 6, 2015 at 12:09

2 Answers 2

4

There is no standard way, but I think it is not hard to roll your own:

(defun wordp (c) (= ?w (char-syntax c)))
(defun lowercasep (c) (and (wordp c) (= c (downcase c))))
(defun uppercasep (c) (and (wordp c) (= c (upcase c))))
(defun whitespacep (c) (= 32 (char-syntax c)))

See also cl-digit-char-p in cl-lib.el.

0
3

Use get-char-code-property to look up the Unicode general category of the character. A lower-case letter, for example, gives a value of "Ll":

(string= "Ll" (get-char-code-property ?a 'general-category))
     ⇒ t

An upper-case letter gives "Lu", and a decimal number "Nd". See the full list of values.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.