Case 1.6.1
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Case --version 1.6.1
NuGet\Install-Package Case -Version 1.6.1
<PackageReference Include="Case" Version="1.6.1" />
paket add Case --version 1.6.1
#r "nuget: Case, 1.6.1"
// Install Case as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Case&version=1.6.1 // Install Case as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Case&version=1.6.1
Each of the following functions will first "undo" previous case manipulations before applying the desired case to the given string.
Foundations
Case.upper('foo_bar') -> 'FOO BAR'
Case.lower('fooBar') -> 'foo bar'
Case.capital('foo_v_bar') -> 'Foo V Bar'
Code Helpers
Case.snake('Foo bar!') -> 'foo_bar'
Case.pascal('foo.bar') -> 'FooBar'
Case.camel('foo, bar') -> 'fooBar'
Case.kebab('Foo? Bar.') -> 'foo-bar'
Case.header('fooBar=') -> 'Foo-Bar'
Case.constant('Foo-Bar') -> 'FOO_BAR'
UI Helpers
Case.title('foo v. bar') -> 'Foo v. Bar'
Case.sentence('"foo!" said bar', ['Bar']) -> '"Foo!" said Bar'
Case.sentence('the 12 oz. can', null, ['oz']) -> 'The 12 oz. can'
Case.sentence(str, names, abbreviations)
accepts an array of proper names that should be capitalized,
regardless of location in the sentence. This function is specialized, but useful
when dealing with input generated with capslock on (i.e. everything my grandma types).
It can also accept a list of abbreviations (words that may end in a period but aren't meant
to end a sentence).
Custom Casing
Case.lower('FOO-BAR', '.') -> 'foo.bar'
Case.upper('Foo? Bar.', '__') -> 'FOO__BAR'
Case.capital('fooBar', ' + ') -> 'Foo + Bar'
Case.lower("Don't keep 'em!", "/", true) -> 'dont/keep/em'
Case.capital("'ello, world.", null, true) -> 'Ello, World.'
Case.upper
, Case.lower
, and Case.capital
accept an optional "fill" value
that will replace any characters which are not letters and numbers. All three also accept
a third optional boolean argument indicating if apostrophes are to be stripped out or left in.
For example, programmatic case changes (snake, kebab, pascal, camel, constant) are best without
apostrophes, but user-facing ones (title, sentence) do not want "don't" turned into "Dont".
Extending Case
Case.type('bang', function(s) {
return Case.upper(s, '!')+'!';
});
Case.bang('bang') -> 'BANG!'
Case.of('TEST!THIS!') -> 'bang'
Case.type(name, fn)
: extends Case, creating a new function on Case
and adding Case.of
support automatically.
Utilities
Case.of('foo') -> 'lower'
Case.of('foo_bar') -> 'snake'
Case.of('Foo v Bar') -> 'title'
Case.of('foo_ Bar') -> undefined
Case.of('Hello there, Bob!', ['Bob']) -> 'sentence'
Case.flip('FlipMe') -> 'fLIPmE'
Case.flip('TEST THIS!') -> 'test this!'
Case.random('Hello!') -> 'hElLO!'
Case.of(str[, names])
: identifies the case of a string, returns undefined if it doesn't match a known typeCase.flip(str)
: reverses the case of letters, no other changesCase.random(str)
: randomizes the case of letters, no other changes
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.
This package has no dependencies.
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