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In my project, that should post turkey country name as "TÜRKİYE" with uppercase letter to the web server. But it doesn't work when I change device language to English. Because It post "TÜRKIYE". Uppercase I. I must fix it and it should post "İ". How can I do this?

       String from1 = textV_fromCity_ac_search.getText().toString();
            String to1 = textV_toCity_ac_search.getText().toString();
            if (isValidData() && isValidDate() && hasSessionId()) {
                Intent intent = new Intent(SearchActivity.this, ResultActivity.class);
                intent.putExtra("SessionId", User.getInstance().getSessionId());
                intent.putExtra("PassengerNumber", textV_passenger_number.getText().toString());
                String[] dataX = getResources().getStringArray(R.array.cities);
                for (String aDataX : dataX) {
                    if (aDataX.equals(textV_fromCity_ac_search.getText().toString() + " (Türkiye)")) {
                        from1 = aDataX;
                    } else if (aDataX.equals(textV_toCity_ac_search.getText().toString() + " (Türkiye)")) {
                        to1 = aDataX;
                    }
                }
                intent.putExtra(MyConstants.BUNDLE_FROM, from1);
                intent.putExtra(MyConstants.BUNDLE_TO, to1);
                intent.putExtra(MyConstants.BUNDLE_ISDOMESTIC, from1.toUpperCase().contains("TÜRKİYE") && to1.toUpperCase().contains("TÜRKİYE"));
                startActivity(intent);
            }
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  • 1
    A minimal reproducible example should help here - we'd need to know what exactly you are doing.
    – Thomas
    Apr 1, 2019 at 10:55
  • @Thomas Sorry. I thought this is an easy way for it. Whatever I will post my code.
    – Shayma
    Apr 1, 2019 at 10:57
  • As a workaround, would the solution also work with toLowerCase() ?
    – JensV
    Apr 1, 2019 at 11:10
  • @JensV No. That's not what I want.
    – Shayma
    Apr 1, 2019 at 11:33
  • 1
    ü to Ü works because that's the default mapping just as i to I is. However, depending on the locale there might be special mappings (such as in your case) and thus you need to provide the locale you want to be used or otherwise you just get the standard mapping.
    – Thomas
    Apr 1, 2019 at 13:02

1 Answer 1

1

You can uppercase String using Locale. By default, toUpperCase method uses system's default Locale. But you can change this by locale parameter.

String uppercased = "Türkiye".toUpperCase(new Locale("tr","TR"));

Edit: Ok, I'm editing an answer in order to clear things.

Also you may want to look at "The Turkey Test": What is The Turkey Test?

In an i18n perspective, localization of Turkish significantly different than other locales.

For example, for latters:

Lowercase I -> ı 
Uppercase i -> İ

In Java, default locale is provided by the system. But in your case, you want to use Turkish locale explicity. If you want to uppercase the string "Türkiye" to "TÜRKİYE" regardless of the system language, you should provide Turkish locale explicity.

In order to achieve that, instead of using String#toUpperCase() method you need to use String#toUpperCase(Locale) method.

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  • The problem is when it post in device with English language. It don't post this "İ" and make it "I". But it post truth "Ü". I need post "İ" also. Thats the problem.
    – Shayma
    Apr 1, 2019 at 11:53
  • "Türkiye".toUpperCase(new Locale("tr","TR")); outputs TÜRKİYE. When you uppercase with locale parameter, device language won't affect your result. Thing that I say, use toUpperCase(Locale) method instead of toUpperCase() method.
    – Tolga Okur
    Apr 1, 2019 at 12:26
  • But this upperCase(Locale) method occurs syntax error. Also I get this TÜRKİYE from array.xml not from string.
    – Shayma
    Apr 1, 2019 at 12:53
  • 2
    @Shayma your code contains from1.toUpperCase().contains("TÜRKİYE") - that indicates that from1 contains lowercase characters. If you read the Javadoc on toUppercase() you'll see that the special handling of i in Turkish is explicitly mentioned - that's why you need to provide the locale for that special case because the system's default locale might produce another mapping, i.e. i -> I.
    – Thomas
    Apr 1, 2019 at 13:00
  • @Thomas Ok. Yes I understand that system's default produce this mapping. Ok I will read Javadoc.
    – Shayma
    Apr 1, 2019 at 13:03

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