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How can I capitalize the first letter of a input sentence in python? Output has to be: Enter sentence to be capitalized:+ input sentence

input_string =input("Enter sentence to be capitalized: ")
def capitalize_first(input_string):
    output=input_string.split('.')
    i=0
    while i<len(output)-1:
        result=output[i][0].upper()+output[i][1:]+"."
    print("Enter sentence to be capitalized:"+result)
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  • 1
    sentence[0].upper() + sentence[1:]?
    – Matthias
    Dec 22, 2018 at 17:57
  • Is it just the first character, or if it is a sentence, every word, like how headings work? Dec 22, 2018 at 18:02
  • it does not work for more than one sentence. The input sentence should be given by user
    – cekik
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:09
  • @Gokce See my updated answer to your question.
    – nandu kk
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:45

3 Answers 3

1

How about input_string.title()?

input_string =input("Enter sentence to be capitalized: ")
def capitalize_first(input_string):
    result = input_string.title()
    print("Enter sentence to be capitalized:"+result)

This built-in method only capitalises the first character and keeps other ones lower, just like how titles work.

As you can see, the extra capitals in THIS IS AN AMAZING are changed.

>>> input_string = "Hello World THIS IS AN AMAZING day!!!"
>>> input_string.title()
>>> 'Hello World This Is An Amazing Day!!!'
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  • Maybe add that it lowercases the rest of the characters?
    – Griffon26
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:00
  • @Griffon26 it should be clear when they run it. I will though. Dec 22, 2018 at 18:00
  • The semantics of title() differ from capitalize_first() on that one point, so that's why I think it's worth mentioning. And as long as he feeds it lower case examples, he won't find the difference.
    – Griffon26
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:02
  • I actually meant it makes the rest lower case. Even letters that were capitals before.
    – Griffon26
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:03
  • @Suraj Kothari there ce
    – cekik
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:07
0

In my opinion there are many ways to do so, but title() is the easiest. You can use upper() inside a for loop which iterating the input string, or even capitalize(). If the goal is to capitalise only the first letter of every word. Then you can't use above methods since they capitalise the word in traditional way (first letter is capitalise and others in simple letters regardless what user entered). To avoid that and keep any capitalise letters inside a word as it is, just like user entered. Then this might be a solution

inputString=input("Your statement enter value or whatever")
seperatedString=inputString.split()
for i in seperatedString:
    i[0].upper()
    print("Anything you want to say" + i)
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sentence="test Sentence"
print(sentence.title()) #makes the first letter of every word in sentence capital
print(sentence[0].upper()+sentence[1:] ) #retains case of other charecters
print(sentence.capitalize()) #makes all other charecters lowercase

Output:

Test Sentence

Test Sentence

Test sentence

Answer your specific question

def modify_string(str1):
    sentence_list=str1.split('.')
    modify_this=input("Enter sentence to be modified: ")
    for idx, item in enumerate(sentence_list):
            modify_this_copy=modify_this
            if item.lower().strip()==modify_this.lower().strip():
                sentence_list[idx]=modify_this_copy[0].upper()+modify_this_copy[1:]
    return '. '.join(sentence_list)
string1="hello. Nice to meet you. hello. Howdy."
print(modify_string(string1))

Output

Enter sentence to be modified: hello

Hello. Nice to meet you. Hello. Howdy.

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  • How is this retaining the case of S in sentence Dec 22, 2018 at 18:05
  • 1
    @SurajKothari The second one will as commented
    – nandu kk
    Dec 22, 2018 at 18:07
  • @nandukk what if you use .title()? It saves the two lines. Dec 22, 2018 at 18:10
  • The last one is not needed anymore. Dec 22, 2018 at 18:10

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