You have a string representing a headline, the title of book, or some other work that needs proper capitalization.
Use a variant of this tc( ) titlecasing function:
INIT { our %nocap; for (qw( a an the and but or as at but by for from in into of off on onto per to with )) { $nocap{$_}++; } } sub tc { local $_ = shift; # put into lowercase if on stop list, else titlecase s/(\pL[\pL']*)/$nocap{$1} ? lc($1) : ucfirst(lc($1))/ge; s/^(\pL[\pL']*) /\u\L$1/x; # last word guaranteed to cap s/ (\pL[\pL']*)$/\u\L$1/x; # first word guaranteed to cap # treat parenthesized portion as a complete title s/\( (\pL[\pL']*) /(\u\L$1/x; s/(\pL[\pL']*) \) /\u\L$1)/x; # capitalize first word following colon or semi-colon s/ ( [:;] \s+ ) (\pL[\pL']* ) /$1\u\L$2/x; return $_; }
The rules for correctly capitalizing a headline or title in English are more complex than simply capitalizing the first letter of each word. If that's all you need to do, something like this should suffice:
s/(\w+\S*\w*)/\u\L$1/g;
Most style guides tell you that the first and last words in the title should always be capitalized, along with every other word that's not an article, the particle "to" in an infinitive construct, a coordinating conjunction, or a preposition.
Here's a demo, this time demonstrating the distinguishing property of titlecase. Assume the tc function is as defined in the Solution.
# with apologies (or kudos) to Stephen Brust, PJF, # and to JRRT, as always. @data = ( "the enchantress of \x{01F3}ur mountain", "meeting the enchantress of \x{01F3}ur mountain", "the lord of the rings: the fellowship of the ring", ); $mask = "%-20s: %s\n"; sub tc_lame { local $_ = shift; s/(\w+\S*\w*)/\u\L$1/g; return $_; } for $datum (@data) { printf $mask, "ALL CAPITALS", uc($datum); printf $mask, "no capitals", lc($datum); printf $mask, "simple titlecase", tc_lame($datum); printf $mask, "better titlecase", tc($datum); print "\n"; } ALL CAPITALS : THE ENCHANTRESS OF DZUR MOUNTAIN no capitals : the enchantress of dzur mountain simple titlecase : The Enchantress Of Dzur Mountain better titlecase : The Enchantress of Dzur Mountain ALL CAPITALS : MEETING THE ENCHANTRESS OF DZUR MOUNTAIN no capitals : meeting the enchantress of dzur mountain simple titlecase : Meeting The Enchantress Of Dzur Mountain better titlecase : Meeting the Enchantress of Dzur Mountain ALL CAPITALS : THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING no capitals : the lord of the rings: the fellowship of the ring simple titlecase : The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring better titlecase : The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
One thing to consider is that some style guides prefer capitalizing only prepositions that are longer than three, four, or sometimes five letters. O'Reilly & Associates, for example, keeps prepositions of four or fewer letters in lowercase. Here's a longer list of prepositions if you prefer, which you can modify to your needs:
@all_prepositions = qw{ about above absent across after against along amid amidst among amongst around as at athwart before behind below beneath beside besides between betwixt beyond but by circa down during ere except for from in into near of off on onto out over past per since than through till to toward towards under until unto up upon versus via with within without };
This kind of approach can take you only so far, though, because it doesn't distinguish between words that can be several parts of speech. Some prepositions on the list might also double as words that should always be capitalized, such as subordinating conjunctions, adverbs, or even adjectives. For example, it's "Down by the Riverside" but "Getting By on Just $30 a Day", or "A Ringing in My Ears" but "Bringing In the Sheaves".
Another consideration is that you might prefer to apply the \u or ucfirst conversion by itself without also putting the whole string into lowercase. That way a word that's already in all capital letters, such as an acronym, doesn't lose that trait. You probably wouldn't want to convert "FBI" and "LBJ" into "Fbi" and "Lbj".
The uc, lc, ucfirst, and lcfirst functions in perlfunc(1) and Chapter 29 of Programming Perl; the \L, \U, \l, and \u string escapes in the "Quote and Quote-like Operators" section of perlop(1) and Chapter 5 of Programming Perl
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