Difference between revisions of "Case tools"

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Revision as of 17:06, 28 April 2010

You see work in progress here; this section already reflects future TED Notepad version 6.0.0.14.
This section may contain incomplete, premature, or mistaken information, prone to change without notice.


All Lower Case (Ctrl+Shift+L)

[Section link: All Lower Case]

Converts all upper case characters in the selection to lower case.

Note: Characters that are not upper case are simply left unchanged.

Example:
When Tim and I to Brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheap to rent. They were three and we were two, so I booked one and Tim-booked-two.
Result:
when tim and i to brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheap to rent. they were three and we were two, so i booked one and tim-booked-two.

See also All Upper Case and Case Inversion tools.

All Upper Case (Ctrl+Shift+U)

[Section link: All Upper Case]

Converts all lower case characters in the selection to upper case.

Note: Characters that are not lower case are simply left unchanged.

Example:
When Tim and I to Brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheep to rent. They were three and we were two, so I booked one and Tim-booked-two.
Result:
WHEN TIM AND I TO BRISBANE WENT, WE MET THREE LADIES, CHEEP TO RENT. THEY WERE THREE AND WE WERE TWO, SO I BOOKED ONE AND TIM-BOOKED-TWO.

See also All Lower Case and Case Inversion tools.

Case Inversion (Ctrl+Shift+I)

[Section link: Case Inversion]

Inverts case of the selected text by changing all lower case characters to upper case and vice versa.

Note: Characters, of which case cannot be determined and inverted, because they do not have their lower case or upper case counterparts, e.g. a comma or a full stop, are simply left unchanged.

Example:
When Tim and I to Brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheep to rent. They were three and we were two, so I booked one and Tim-booked-two.
Result:
wHEN tIM AND i TO bRISBANE WENT, WE MET THREE LADIES, CHEEP TO RENT. tHEY WERE THREE AND WE WERE TWO, SO i BOOKED ONE AND tIM-BOOKED-TWO.

See also All Lower Case and All Upper Case tools.

Word Capitals (Ctrl+Shift+T)

[Section link: Word Capitals]

Converts the first character of every word in the selection to upper case and all other characters to lower case.

Note: All word beginnings are turned upper case by this tool. For converting only the very first word character in the entire selection to upper case, see First Capital tool. For sentence-sensitive conversions, see Make Sentences tool.

Note: Characters that are neither lower case nor upper case are simply left unchanged.

Example:
When Tim and I to Brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheep to rent. They were three and we were two, so I booked one and Tim-booked-two.
Result:
When Tim And I To Brisbane Went, We Met Three Ladies, Cheep To Rent. They Were Three And We Were Two, So I Booked One And Tim-Booked-Two.

See also First Capital and Make Sentences tools.

Make Sentences (Ctrl+Shift+S)

[Section link: Make Sentences]

Converts the first character of every sentence in the selection to upper case.

Note: Make Sentences does not modify any other characters of a sentence, except the first one.

Note: Characters that are not lower case are simply left unchanged even if they are the first in a sentence.

Example:
Alice? who the f... is Alice?
Result:
Alice? Who the f... Is Alice?

Tip: If you want to convert all other characters in a sentence to lower case, you have to use the All Lower Case tool (hotkey Ctrl+Shift+L) first. Only then use the Make Sentences tool.

See also Word Capitals and First Capital tools.

Random Case (Alt+Ctrl+Shift+I)

[Section link: Random Case]

Converts case of the selected text by randomly changing upper case characters to lower case and vice versa.

Note: Characters, of which case cannot be determined and inverted, because they do not have their lower case or upper case counterparts, e.g. a comma or a full stop, are simply left unchanged.

Example:
When Tim and I to Brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheep to rent. They were three and we were two, so I booked one and Tim-booked-two.
Result:
WHeN tIm AND I tO BrISBane Went, WE met thREe LAdIEs, cheeP TO rEnt. thEy WEre tHREe aNd We WeRe TWo, so I bookEd One anD TiM-boOKEd-tWo.

See also Fun Case tool.

Fun Case (Alt+Ctrl+Shift+J)

[Section link: Fun Case]

Converts case of words in the selected text by pseudo-randomly changing upper case characters to lower case and vice versa. The process of changing character case follows a set of fun rules mixed with randomizing functions that generate somewhat alternating character case. The results should (in some way) take after the newspeak of the 20th century.

Note: Characters, of which case cannot be determined and modified, because they do not have their lower case or upper case counterparts, e.g. a comma or a full stop, are simply left unchanged. Also, characters that are not part of words are not modified.

Example:
When Tim and I to Brisbane went, we met three ladies, cheep to rent. They were three and we were two, so I booked one and Tim-booked-two.
Result:
wHeN tIm aNd I To BrIsbaNe wEnt, we mEt ThReE LaDiEs, CHeEP To rEnT. TheY weRe tHrEe AnD We WEre tWo, sO I bOokEd ONe AnD tIm-bOoKeD-TwO.

See also Random Case tool.