|  | ||
|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| bin | ||
| docs | ||
| etc | ||
| lib | ||
| package.json | ||
| README.md | ||
Uncapitalize
Uncapitalize the first character of a string.
Usage
var uncapitalize = require( '@stdlib/string/uncapitalize' );
uncapitalize( str )
Uncapitalizes the first character of a string.
var out = uncapitalize( 'Last man standing' );
// returns 'last man standing'
out = uncapitalize( 'Hidden Treasures' );
// returns 'hidden Treasures'
Examples
var uncapitalize = require( '@stdlib/string/uncapitalize' );
var out = uncapitalize( 'Last man standing' );
// returns 'last man standing'
out = uncapitalize( 'Presidential election' );
// returns 'presidential election'
out = uncapitalize( 'JavaScript' );
// returns 'javaScript'
out = uncapitalize( 'Hidden Treasures' );
// returns 'hidden Treasures'
CLI
Usage
Usage: uncapitalize [options] [<string>]
Options:
  -h,    --help                Print this message.
  -V,    --version             Print the package version.
         --split sep           Delimiter for stdin data. Default: '/\\r?\\n/'.
Notes
- 
If the split separator is a regular expression, ensure that the splitoption is either properly escaped or enclosed in quotes.# Not escaped... $ echo -n $'Beep\nBoop' | uncapitalize --split /\r?\n/ # Escaped... $ echo -n $'Beep\nBoop' | uncapitalize --split /\\r?\\n/
- 
The implementation ignores trailing delimiters. 
Examples
$ uncapitalize Beep
beep
To use as a standard stream,
$ echo -n 'Beep' | uncapitalize
beep
By default, when used as a standard stream, the implementation assumes newline-delimited data. To specify an alternative delimiter, set the split option.
$ echo -n 'Beep\tBOOP' | uncapitalize --split '\t'
beep
bOOP
See Also
- @stdlib/string/capitalize: capitalize the first character in a string.
- @stdlib/string/lowercase: convert a string to lowercase.