This concerns some 2,694 questions today, in 16 tags (+1 synonym) that are all related to upper & lower case text.
Some of these tags were previously discussed in Merging [case-sensitive] and [case-insensitive] tags.
I propose the bulk of these tags be removed or made synonyms, as they add no value to categorizing or finding answers. The fact is, there are many more questions that are relevant that are not sporting any of these tags. Consider:
- About 9,000 questions containing "capitalize" but not tagged capitalize.
- Almost 28,000 questions containing "uppercase" but not tagged uppercase.
- More than 28,000 questions containing "lowercase" but not tagged lowercase. (The counts are coincidental.)
- etc.
The only real problem here is the abundance of overlapping and redundant tags; we can anticipate a high level of duplication due to the subject matter, but generally the questions appear to be good. The discussion needed is whether to de-tag, re-tag or synonym-ize, and which tags to keep, if any. (Personally, if it were up to me to choose one tag to rule them all, I would select capitalization.)
Tag details
capitalization 0 followers, 223 questions, Capitalization means changing each first letter of a string to a capital letter.
- Not entirely correct according to dictionary.com, which says "to write or print in capital letters letters or with an initial capital."
capitalize 0 followers, 145 questions, Capitalize is writing a word with its first letter as a capital letter (upper-case letter) and the remaining letters in lower case.
- A small number of these (8 currently) are about Ruby's
string.capitalize()
.
- A small number of these (8 currently) are about Ruby's
uppercase 1 follower, 578 questions, Uppercase characters are capital letters.
- lowercase 1 follower, 442 questions. Lowercase characters are letters in minuscule: a, b, c, …
- mixed-case 0 followers, 5 questions, For issues with strings containing both lower-case and upper-case characters.
- title-case 0 followers, 36 questions, In string or sentence formatting, title case is the term used for capitalizing the first character of each principal word.
- toupper 0 followers, 66 questions, In C / C++ toupper function converts a given character to uppercase according to the character conversion rules defined by the currently installed C locale. In the default "C" locale, the following lowercase letters abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz are replaced with respective uppercase letters ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ.
tolower 0 followers, 68 questions, In C / C++ tolower function converts a given character to lowercase according to the character conversion rules defined by the currently installed C locale. In the default "C" locale, the following uppercase letters ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ are replaced with respective lowercase letters abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz.
case-folding 0 followers, 8 questions, Questions related to the case-insensitve comparison and use of strings.
- case-conversion 0 followers, 9 questions, no wiki
- case-sensitive 1 follower, 746 questions, An operation is case sensitive when uppercase and lowercase characters are treated differently.
- Synonym: case-sensitivity
- case-insensitive 2 followers, 612 questions, An operation is case insensitive when uppercase and lowercase characters are equally treated.
- ignore-case 0 followers, 42 questions, A method that ignores case when comparing two strings.
sentencecase 0 followers, 6 questions, no wiki.
capslock 0 followers, 92 questions, Caps lock is a lock key found on many computer keyboards, depending on the local keyboard layout they implement.
- This tag may deserve to remain separate; the tagged questions are generally focused on dealing with hardware (or simulated hardware, e.g. smartphone keyboards), rather than programmatic manipulation of strings. It's included for completeness of the discussion.
- Side problem: The wiki appears to be plagiarized from Wikipedia without attribution, and is largely irrelevant.
- upcase 0 followers, 12 questions, no wiki
- This is a Ruby-specific method. Other case-related string methods in Ruby which don't have their own tags are
downcase
andswapcase
. There are 8 Ruby-tagged questions in capitalize which appear to be aboutstring.capitalize()
.
- This is a Ruby-specific method. Other case-related string methods in Ruby which don't have their own tags are
isupper()
andtoupper()
. All the other uses fall into one of these.