Is there a way to convert a string to lowercase?
"Kilometers" → "kilometers"
Answers:
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Method 1
Use str.lower():
"Kilometer".lower()
Method 2
The canonical Pythonic way of doing this is
>>> 'Kilometers'.lower() 'kilometers'
However, if the purpose is to do case insensitive matching, you should use case-folding:
>>> 'Kilometers'.casefold() 'kilometers'
Here’s why:
>>> "Maße".casefold() 'masse' >>> "Maße".lower() 'maße' >>> "MASSE" == "Maße" False >>> "MASSE".lower() == "Maße".lower() False >>> "MASSE".casefold() == "Maße".casefold() True
This is a str method in Python 3, but in Python 2, you’ll want to look at the PyICU or py2casefold – several answers address this here.
Unicode Python 3
Python 3 handles plain string literals as unicode:
>>> string = 'Километр' >>> string 'Километр' >>> string.lower() 'километр'
Python 2, plain string literals are bytes
In Python 2, the below, pasted into a shell, encodes the literal as a string of bytes, using utf-8.
And lower doesn’t map any changes that bytes would be aware of, so we get the same string.
>>> string = 'Километр' >>> string 'xd0x9axd0xb8xd0xbbxd0xbexd0xbcxd0xb5xd1x82xd1x80' >>> string.lower() 'xd0x9axd0xb8xd0xbbxd0xbexd0xbcxd0xb5xd1x82xd1x80' >>> print string.lower() Километр
In scripts, Python will object to non-ascii (as of Python 2.5, and warning in Python 2.4) bytes being in a string with no encoding given, since the intended coding would be ambiguous. For more on that, see the Unicode how-to in the docs and PEP 263
Use Unicode literals, not str literals
So we need a unicode string to handle this conversion, accomplished easily with a unicode string literal, which disambiguates with a u prefix (and note the u prefix also works in Python 3):
>>> unicode_literal = u'Километр' >>> print(unicode_literal.lower()) километр
Note that the bytes are completely different from the str bytes – the escape character is 'u' followed by the 2-byte width, or 16 bit representation of these unicode letters:
>>> unicode_literal u'u041au0438u043bu043eu043cu0435u0442u0440' >>> unicode_literal.lower() u'u043au0438u043bu043eu043cu0435u0442u0440'
Now if we only have it in the form of a str, we need to convert it to unicode. Python’s Unicode type is a universal encoding format that has many advantages relative to most other encodings. We can either use the unicode constructor or str.decode method with the codec to convert the str to unicode:
>>> unicode_from_string = unicode(string, 'utf-8') # "encoding" unicode from string
>>> print(unicode_from_string.lower())
километр
>>> string_to_unicode = string.decode('utf-8')
>>> print(string_to_unicode.lower())
километр
>>> unicode_from_string == string_to_unicode == unicode_literal
True
Both methods convert to the unicode type – and same as the unicode_literal.
Best Practice, use Unicode
It is recommended that you always work with text in Unicode.
Software should only work with Unicode strings internally, converting to a particular encoding on output.
Can encode back when necessary
However, to get the lowercase back in type str, encode the python string to utf-8 again:
>>> print string
Километр
>>> string
'xd0x9axd0xb8xd0xbbxd0xbexd0xbcxd0xb5xd1x82xd1x80'
>>> string.decode('utf-8')
u'u041au0438u043bu043eu043cu0435u0442u0440'
>>> string.decode('utf-8').lower()
u'u043au0438u043bu043eu043cu0435u0442u0440'
>>> string.decode('utf-8').lower().encode('utf-8')
'xd0xbaxd0xb8xd0xbbxd0xbexd0xbcxd0xb5xd1x82xd1x80'
>>> print string.decode('utf-8').lower().encode('utf-8')
километр
So in Python 2, Unicode can encode into Python strings, and Python strings can decode into the Unicode type.
Method 3
With Python 2, this doesn’t work for non-English words in UTF-8. In this case decode('utf-8') can help:
>>> s='Километр'
>>> print s.lower()
Километр
>>> print s.decode('utf-8').lower()
километр
Method 4
Also, you can overwrite some variables:
s = input('UPPER CASE')
lower = s.lower()
If you use like this:
s = "Kilometer" print(s.lower()) - kilometer print(s) - Kilometer
It will work just when called.
Method 5
Don’t try this, totally un-recommend, don’t do this:
import string
s='ABCD'
print(''.join([string.ascii_lowercase[string.ascii_uppercase.index(i)] for i in s]))
Output:
abcd
Since no one wrote it yet you can use swapcase (so uppercase letters will become lowercase, and vice versa) (and this one you should use in cases where i just mentioned (convert upper to lower, lower to upper)):
s='ABCD' print(s.swapcase())
Output:
abcd
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0