What is the easiest way to capitalize the first letter in each word of a string?
10 Answers
As @brian is mentioning in the comments the currently accepted answer by @piCookie is wrong!
$_="what's the wrong answer?";
s/\b(\w)/\U$1/g
print;
This will print "What'S The Wrong Answer?" notice the wrongly capitalized S
As the FAQ says you are probably better off using
s/([\w']+)/\u\L$1/g
See the faq.
I don't believe ucfirst()
satisfies the OP's question to capitalize the first letter of each word in a string without splitting the string and joining it later.
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2Err, \U is internally implemented by calling ucfirst, so your statement about it contradicts your own advice. :-) Sep 16, 2008 at 21:52
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The s///g switch iterates, so it does the whole string. When I first saw another answer with just "look at the ucfirst function" I felt at least more about split/join should be mentioned, and I see the person posting edited to include those already.– piCookieSep 16, 2008 at 21:55
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1You don't want to use the advice you gave, which is the code the FAQ uses to show the wrong way to do it. Read the text right after that bit where I explain why that answer is wrong. :) Sep 18, 2008 at 6:27
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5I've now modified the FAQ to remove the wrong answer everyone is latching onto because they didn't read the second paragraph. Sep 21, 2008 at 22:42
Take a look at the ucfirst function.
$line = join " ", map {ucfirst} split " ", $line;
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2Note that split(" ", $line) splits on arbitrary whitespaces, so that won't preserve all whitespaces.– moritzOct 2, 2008 at 20:00
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1Agreed; the correct answer would be
$line = join " ", map {ucfirst} split / /, $line;
(note the " changed to /)– EtherOct 10, 2009 at 3:21 -
@Ether: Closer, but it still strips trailing spaces (and wouldn't recognize words separated by
\t
only). Oct 25, 2015 at 3:55 -
1A bigger problem is that
ucfirst
doesn't actually lowercase the string. Title case isn'tFOO
and this won't fix that. Aug 9, 2019 at 2:16
$capitalized = join '', map { ucfirst lc $_ } split /(\s+)/, $line;
By capturing the whitespace, it is inserted in the list and used to rebuild the original spacing. "ucfirst lc" capitalizes "teXT" to "Text".
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1
$string =~ s/(\w+)/\u$1/g;
should work just fine
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1Wouldn't this uppercase the entire string, instead of the 1st letter of each word? Feb 18, 2014 at 13:56
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@briandfoy: your link is broken. Point to this: learn.perl.org/faq/… Feb 18, 2014 at 13:57
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This capitalizes only the first word of each line:
perl -ne "print (ucfirst($1)$2) if s/^(\w)(.*)/\1\2/" file
Note that the FAQ solution doesn't work if you have words that are in all-caps and you want them to be (only) capitalized instead. You can either make a more complicated regex, or just do a lc on the string before applying the FAQ solution.
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1The FAQ solution works just fine because there are actually several solution in the FAQ. The best solution is Damian's Text::Autoformat, which solves exactly your problem. Sep 21, 2008 at 22:24
try this :
echo "what's the wrong answer?" |perl -pe 's/^/ /; s/\s(\w+)/ \u$1/g; s/^ //'
Output will be:
What's The Wrong Answer?
The ucfirst function in a map certainly does this, but only in a very rudimentary way. If you want something a bit more sophisticated, have a look at John Gruber's TitleCase script.