Capital to lowercase


Convert Case | Convert upper case to lower case, lower case to upper case and more!

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Simply enter your text and choose the case you want to convert it to.

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A very handy online text tool where you can change between lower case and upper case letters, where you can capitalize, uncapitalize, convert to mix case and transform your text. Explore the options below:

Sentence Case

The sentence case converter will allow you to paste any text you’d like, and it will automatically transform it to a fully formed structured sentence.

It works by capitalizing the very first letter in each sentence, and will then go on to transform the rest of the text into lowercase as well as converting i’s into I’s. Every letter after a full stop will get converted into an upper case letter.

Note: it won’t, however, capitalize names or places.

This is an example of sentence case.

Lower Case

If you are wondering how to uncapitalize text, this is exactly what the lower case text converter will allow you to do - it transforms all the letters in your text into lowercase letters. Simply copy the text that you need generating into lower case and paste the text into the box above and select the ‘lower case’ tab.

this is an example of lower case.

Upper Case

The upper case transformer will take any text that you have and will generate all the letters into upper case ones. It will essentially make all lower case letters into CAPITALS (as well as keep upper case letters as upper case letters).

To do this, you simply have to select the text that you need changing and pasting into the box above and then select the UPPER CASE tab.

THIS IS AN EXAMPLE OF UPPER CASE.

Capitalized Case

The capitalized case converter will automatically convert the starting letter of every word into an upper case and will leave the remaining letters as lower case ones.

Simply copy the content that you will like to generate into this format, then paste into the box form above and select the Capitalized Case tab.

This Is An Example Of Capitalized Case.

Alternating Case

The alternating case converter will allow you to transform your text (no matter the current format) into text that alternates between lower case and upper case. It will generate a capital letter and then a lower case letter within the same word.

tHiS Is aN ExAmPlE Of aLtErNaTiNg cAsE.

Title Case

The title case converter is perfect for those who are a bit unsure on how to title an upcoming essay. It essentially ensures the correct letters are capitalized within the context of a title. Words such as “an” will be left all in lower case and words that are important will be converted such as “Title”.

This Is an Example of Title Case.

Small Text Generator

The small text generator simply takes regular sized text and converts it into small text (specifically “small caps” as well as “Superscript” text. Write out your normal text and see it get converted into the small text font.

Tʜɪꜱ ɪꜱ ᴀɴ ᴇxᴀᴍᴘʟᴇ ᴏꜰ ᴛɪɴʏ ᴛᴇxᴛ ᴄᴀꜱᴇ ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ
ᵗʰⁱˢ ⁱˢ ᵃⁿ ᵉˣᵃᵐᵖˡᵉ ᵒᶠ ᵗⁱⁿʸ ᵗᵉˣᵗ ᶜᵃˢᵉ ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ

Wide Text Generator

If you are looking to widen the look of your text, the widening text generator is great for this, otherwise known as the Aesthetic Font and text generator. Simply type your normal text and see it get wider and wider.

This is an example of wide aesthetic test。

Strikethrough Text Generator

If you want a quick way of crossing out your text, this is a great tool. Type out the normal text you want to be lined through and you will see it get automatically generated, ready for you to copy and paste.

T̶h̶i̶s̶ ̶i̶s̶ ̶a̶n̶ ̶e̶x̶a̶m̶p̶l̶e̶ ̶o̶f̶ ̶s̶t̶r̶i̶k̶e̶t̶h̶r̶o̶u̶g̶h̶ ̶t̶e̶x̶t̶. ̶

Reverse Text Generator

If you want a fast and quick way of making your text go back to front, the reverse text generator is great. Write out your text like normal and then see it get flipped.

.txet sdrawkcab fo ecnetnes elpmaxe na si sihT

Upside down Text Generator

Similar to the mirror text generator as wella s the reverse text generator, you can flip your text upside down as well as back to front with the upside down text generator.

˙ʇxǝʇ uʍop ǝpᴉsdn ɟo ǝldɯɐxǝ uɐ sᴉ sᴉɥ┴

Morse Code Translator

Whether you are looking to translate morse code messages into simple english or the other way around, this online translation generator can do just that. It also comes with an audio player to hear it.

Binary Code Translator

Translate binary code into English and English into binary code with the following generator. Type out regularly and get a series of 0’s and 1’s in return.

01000010 01101001 01101110 01100001 01110010 01111001 00100000 01000011 01101111 01100100 01100101 00100000 01010100 01110010 01100001 01101110 01110011 01101100 01100001 01110100 01101111 01110010

Bold Text Generator

A quick way to bold your text online. Simply type out the normal text into the tool and see it automatically get converted to the bold versio which you can copy and paste across.

𝗧𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗶𝘀 𝗮𝗻 𝗲𝘅𝗮𝗺𝗽𝗹𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝗯𝗼𝗹𝗱 𝘁𝗲𝘅𝘁.

Italic Text Converter

If you want to italicise your font, this is a great tool. Type out your normal text and see it automatically write on a slant, which you can copy and paste where you want.

𝘛𝘩𝘪𝘴 𝘪𝘴 𝘢𝘯 𝘦𝘹𝘢𝘮𝘱𝘭𝘦 𝘰𝘧 𝘪𝘵𝘢𝘭𝘪𝘤 𝘵𝘦𝘹𝘵.

Underline Text Generator

Underline your text online with this underliner tool. Write out or paste across the content you want to be underlined and then you will see it automatically generated underlined - which you can copy and paste across to where you want.

T̲h̲i̲s̲ ̲i̲s̲ ̲a̲n̲ ̲e̲x̲a̲m̲p̲l̲e̲ ̲o̲f̲ ̲u̲n̲d̲e̲r̲l̲i̲n̲e̲ ̲t̲e̲x̲t̲.̲

Mirror Text Generator

The mirror text is basically the exact same text that you would get when you have your text facing a mirror. Print out the text and hold it up to a mirror and it should read the correct way.

.ƚxɘƚ ɿoɿɿim ʇo ɘlqmɒxɘ nɒ ƨi ƨiʜT

Unicode Text Converter

Explore our unicode text generator for a wide range of different fonts. Type in your normal text and then choose whatever you want to use.

Zalgo Glitch Text Generator

Want to produce funky and glitchy text? `This Zalgo text will do just that. Type out what you would normally want to and then see it get turned into the Zalgo font.

T̵̡̧̨̖̪̗̠͔̰̓̈́̕͜ẖ̷̙̪̮̭̖̮̯̘͋͐̃̅͌̈́̆̕ͅȉ̶̛̫̟͎͋͗̓s̵̡͔̻͆̄͘ i̴̟͔͚͔͗͠ś̴̳̗͙ a̵̧̳͇̜̪̣̅̓n̸̛̰̼͇̱͐̎̀̽̌̐̿̈́̓ͅ ḛ̴̟̉͗x̷̬̩̀̕à̵̡̭̫̤̯͇̫͓̘͊̑͐̎̍͠m̶͎̦̾̾͠p̷̗̬̯̰͙̣̮̋̈́͆͊̇̿̋l̸̨̘̞̗̩̞̱͖̏̍̽̆͜͜e̸̱̹̬̞̹̍̇̓ͅ o̷̊ͅḟ̴͈̆̔̾̒́ g̴̤̪̻̰̗̀̓̎͋͝l̷̨͇͔͈̤̝̊̀̂͛͜į̴̡̦̼̄̏̏͛̒ẗ̶̙̻̜̺͉́̽̒̅̀̐͝c̸̛̛͇̱͇̮͔͔͙̼̀̈́̀͜h̵̙̘̣̻͈̫͇̜͂́̍͊͗̀͜ t̷̬̹̜̼̫̘͒̊ę̷̰̬̠̭̠͉̳̐́̒͑͋̓̎̽̈́͠x̷̢̢̛͓̜͚̖̜͕̼̙̌̍ţ̵̖͖̜̜̪́̎͒̚͜͝.̷̛̬̖̳̻̪̩̾̾̆̄̓͋͒̚͠

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Registered office address: C4DI @TheDock, 31-38 Queen Street, Hull, England, HU1 1UU

Strikethrough Text Generator | Cross Out Text Generator

Strikethrough Text Generator | Cross Out Text Generator | Convert Case

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Simple and easy to use strikethrough text generator. Convert standard text into crossed out text with this online strike text generator. Type normal text on the left and have the content come out with crossed out font through the strikeout generator.

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Strikethrough Your Text

Are you trying to find an easy and quick way to get your text struck through? Then you should take a look at our brand new strikethrough text generator. This tool can give you all of the help that you need to quickly edit the style of a piece of text in a fraction of the time that you would normally have expected. A strikethrough text generator is something that you can quickly and easily use to make sure all of your text looks like this.

A strikethrough text style is commonly used today to convey the idea of something being deleted whilst still ensuring it is present. Whether used for comical purposes, for academic editing, or for any other reason that you might have in mind, our strikethrough text generator ensures you have a far easier time of it when it comes to editing and adjusting text to fit the look that you need.

The biggest problem you likely find when it comes to dealing with a text editing session is the time spend editing. Formatting is a key part of any text, so you want to ensure that it is as close to the real thing as it should be. With our help, you can quickly ensure that you are left with stylish looking strikethrough text.

To use our editor, all that you need to do is type in and/or paste in the content that you want to have strikethrough formatting attached to. Then, you need to hit the ‘Copy to Clipboard’ or ‘Download Text’ buttons and receive the strikethrough text that was edited.

Simply copy in the content that you want to have edited into the left-hand side box, and then take the content that appears on the right-hand side and ensure your text is struck through.

How does it work

All you have to do is write up your normal text in the column on the left and you will see that the text is getting automatically crossed out in the column on the right.

Use any text you want, then you will see a line go through it - which you can then copy and paste to wherever you like, whether that’s Facebook or Twitter.

You are able to copy and paste this crossed out text to Facebook, Instagram and Twitter as it is not a HTML tag, you can simply copy across the cross out characters in plain text that you can then paste through.

Here’s an example of what you will get generated with letters and words with a slash in it.

T̶h̶i̶s̶ ̶i̶s̶ ̶a̶n̶ ̶e̶x̶a̶m̶p̶l̶e̶ ̶o̶f̶ ̶s̶t̶r̶i̶k̶e̶t̶h̶r̶o̶u̶g̶h̶ ̶t̶e̶x̶t̶.̶

How to Cross Out Text?

Go ahead and follow these simple steps to strike through text that you can use on any web page for social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram.

  1. Type in your text.
  2. See your text automatically turn up with a strike through it.
  3. Download the crossed out text.
  4. Then paste it where you’d like it to appear.

Let us know if you’ve got any questions about the cross out text generator and the Convert Case Team will be more than happy to help you.

Check out our other text tools as well such as our small text generator and wide text generator.

Registered in England and Wales. Company number: 11614495.
Registered office address: C4DI @TheDock, 31-38 Queen Street, Hull, England, HU1 1UU

Uppercase and Lowercase Letters / Sudo Null IT News

I've gathered here some not-so-obvious facts about uppercase and lowercase letters that a programmer may encounter at work. Many of you have translated strings into “all uppercase” (uppercase), “all lowercase” (lowercase), “first capital, and the rest lowercase” (titlecase). Even more popular is the case-insensitive comparison operation. On a global scale, such operations can be quite non-trivial. The post is structured as a "collection of misconceptions" with counterexamples.

1. If I convert the string to uppercase or lowercase, the number of Unicode characters does not change.

No. The text may contain lowercase ligatures that do not correspond to one character in upper case. For example, when translating to uppercase: fi (U+FB00) -> FI (U+0046, U+0049)

2. Ligatures are a perversion, no one uses them. If they are not taken into account, then I'm right.

No. Some letters with diacritics do not have an exact match in other case, so you have to use a combined character. Let's say the Afrikaans language has the letter ʼn (U+0149). In upper case, it corresponds to a combination of two characters: (U+02BC, U+004E). If you come across a transliteration of Arabic text, you may encounter (U+1E96), which also does not have a single-character match in upper case, so you will have to replace it with (U+0048, U+0331). The Wakhi language has a letter (U+01F0) with a similar problem. You may argue that this is exotic, but there are 23,000 articles in Afrikaans on Wikipedia.

3. All right, but let's consider a combined character (involving modifying or combining code points) as one character. Then the length will still be preserved.

No. There is, for example, the letter "escet" ß (U+00DF) in German. When converted to uppercase, it turns into two SS characters (U+0053, U+0053).

4. Okay, okay, got it. We will assume that the number of Unicode characters can increase, but not more than twice.

No. There are specific Greek letters, for example, (U+0390) that turn into three Unicode characters (U+0399, U+0308, U+0301)

5. Let's talk about titlecase. Everything is simple here: I took the first character from the word, translated it into uppercase, took all the subsequent ones, translated it into lowercase.

No. Let's remember the same ligatures. If a word in lowercase begins with fl (U+FB02), then in uppercase the ligature becomes FL (U+0046, U+004C), but in titlecase it becomes Fl (U+0046, U+006C). The same with ß, but, theoretically, words cannot begin with it.

6. Those ligatures again! Well, we take the first character from the word, translate it into uppercase, if more than one character is obtained, then we leave the first one, and the rest back into lowercase. Then it will definitely work.

Won't work. There is, for example, the digraph dz (U+01F3), which can be used in text in Polish, Slovak, Macedonian or Hungarian. In uppercase it corresponds to the digraph DZ (U+01F1), and in titlecase it corresponds to the digraph Dz (U+01F2). There are other digraphs. The Greek language, on the other hand, will please you with jokes with hypogegrammen and progegrammen (fortunately, this is rarely found in modern texts). In general, the uppercase and titlecase variants for a character can be different, and there are separate entries for them in the Unicode standard.

7. Good, but at least the result of converting a character's case to uppercase or lowercase does not depend on its position in the word.

No. For example, the Greek capital sigma Σ (U+03A3) becomes a lowercase ς (U+03C2) at the end of a word and σ (U+03C3) in the middle.

8. Oh, okay, let's process the Greek sigma separately. But in any case, the same character in the same position in the text is converted in the same way.

No. For example, in most Latin languages, the lower case for I (U+0049) is i (U+0069), but not in Turkish and Azeri. There, the lower case for I is ı (U+0131) and the capital case for i is İ (U+0130). In Turkey, because of this, enchanting bugs are sometimes observed in a variety of software. And if you come across a text in Lithuanian with accents, then, for example, a capital Ì (U + 00CC), which will turn not into ì (U + 00EC), but into (U + 0069, U + 0307, ​​U + 0300) . In general, the result of the conversion also depends on the language. Most of the complex cases are described here.

9. What a horror! Well, let's now correctly convert to uppercase and lowercase. Comparing two words case-insensitively is not a problem: we translate both into lowercase and compare.

There are also many pitfalls that follow from the above. For example, it will not work with German straße and STRASSE (the former will not change, the latter will turn into strasse). There will also be problems with many of the other letters described above.

10. M-yes… Maybe then everything is in the uppercase?

And it won't always work (although much more often). But, say, if you come across the notation STRAE (yes, there is a big escet in German and Unicode too), it will not match straße. For comparisons, letters are converted according to a special Unicode table - CaseFolding, according to which both ß and SS will turn into ss.

11. A-ah-ah, this is some kind of kapets!

Here I agree.

If some symbols are not displayed for someone, write me a private message, I will replace it with a picture.

CAPITAL AND SMALL LETTER Y, y

CAPITAL AND SMALL LETTER Y, y

LETTER CAPITAL AND SMALL LETTER Y , Y

Objectives: teach to write capital and small letters U , at ; reinforce writing skills; develop speech, imaginative thinking, phonemic hearing; enrich children's vocabulary.

Lesson progress

I. Introduction teachers. Updating of basic knowledge.

Game Find a Pair.

What can you say about these letters? What are they?

- What vowels are written after a hard consonant? (Letters a, o . ) What vowels are written after soft consonant? (Letters i, ё .)

- Today we will learn to write the letter Y . What sound does this letter represent?

- You're right, vowel sound. It can be sung low and high, thick and thin voice. Let's try together!

The kettle is on the stove.

The teapot makes a thin voice: woo!

WOLF AND KOMARIK

Wolf caught a mosquito,

Broke his nose with his paw: woo!

Stop mosquito, I'm asking (ooh),

I'll scratch my forehead (ooh)!

II. Learning new material.

1. Work according to prescription.

The letter Y will remind you of the ears

At the bunny on top.
The snail has horns too

So the letter Y are similar!
Let's draw a bough to the trunk -

And we will see the letter Y .
charcoal drawing,

Stick to stick - corner.
Corner. Coal. U we hear.

At we will write at the beginning of the words.

- About which letter - printed or written - is it said in a poem? Compare printed and written letters W . How are they similar?

2. Work with the sample capital letter Y .

– Consider the sample capital letter Y . Describe the direction of movement of the hand when writing the letter Y . (Letter consists of two elements. We start writing just below the middle of the wide auxiliary line. We lead the hand up to the right, round off, we lead the inclined line down to the bottom line of the working line. Near bringing to the top line of the working line, round to the right, bring to the top lines of the working line, we lead a little to the right up.

The second element must be at the same level as first. We lead down an inclined line. Almost reaching the bottom line of the working lines, round to the right and slightly rise above the bottom line of the working line.)

- Record these items in air; in a notebook.

- Independently circle and add letters on the 1-5th lines. (Teacher provides individual assistance to students.)

3. Reading letters and words.

On the board are written lowercase letters and , y and words y , y . The teacher reads poetry, the children at his command read letters and words in unison.

MASHA GOT LOST

Masha is crying: ... ( a-a-a ),
And the wolf ... ( woo )!
Mashenka is scared in the forest,
Let's call her - ... ( ау )!

And we have a girl,

Her name is Alyonushka,

Chorus girl,

Round head.

All day ... ("wah-wah") -

That's all her words.

- Read the "words" written on the next line. Pay attention to the connection of letters.

4. Game "Collect the letter".

- Consider the elements of letters. Think what letters "crumbled". On an empty line, write the letters that can be built from these elements.

Independent work of students.

physical minute.

Wind d y et, howling: "Uuuuu!"

Our mill is spinning: "Vzh-vzh-vzh!"

One, two, three, four -

Twisted, twirled.

(Forward bends, arms to the sides.)

5. Work with sample lower case letter to .

– Consider the lowercase letter pattern y . Compare capital and small letters. Are they the same or different are written? Tell us about the direction of movement of the hand when writing the letter y . (The letter consists of two elements. The first element is a short stick with rounded at the bottom. We start writing from the top line of the working line, leading down. Slightly not bringing to the bottom line of the working line, round to the right, bring to the bottom line, draw a line up to the right to the top line of the working line.

The second element is a stick with a loop at the bottom. Second element We start writing from the top line of the working line. We lead down a long stick, then by moving the hand to the left we write a loop, it should be small. The loop intersects with an inclined stick necessarily on the bottom line of the working line. We finish writing in the middle of the working line.)

prescription the second element of the lowercase letter y .

- Independently circle and add letters on the 1-4th lines. (Teacher provides individual assistance to students.)

6. Writing letters in words.

- Look at the pictures.


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