Stop Retyping Text Just to Change Capitalization
We've all been there: you've typed a bunch of text, then realized it's in the wrong case. Maybe you accidentally left caps lock on. Maybe you need a headline but have paragraph text. Maybe you're reformatting a document for consistency.
Retyping is tedious. A case converter does it in seconds.
What the Tool Does
Our Case Converter transforms text between different capitalization styles:
- Paste in your text
- Click the case style you want
- Copy the converted result
It handles any amount of text, preserves everything except the capitalization, and works instantly.
The Different Cases
UPPERCASE — Every letter is capital. Good for emphasis, headings in certain styles, or fixing text that was lowercase when it shouldn't have been.
lowercase — No capitals at all. Useful for cleaning up text that was accidentally all caps, or for certain formatting requirements.
Title Case — Each Important Word Gets Capitalized. Standard for headlines, product names, and formal titles.
Sentence case — Only the first letter of each sentence is capitalized. Like normal paragraph text.
camelCase — noSpacesAndFirstLetterOfEachWordCapitalized. Programmers use this for variable names.
snake_case — words_separated_by_underscores. Another programming and database convention.
Real Situations Where This Helps
Fixing CAPS LOCK mistakes — Typed a whole email with caps lock on? Convert to lowercase, then clean up the first letters.
Formatting headings — Your blog requires title case but you write naturally. Convert after writing.
Database work — Converting names or values to consistent formats.
Social media formatting — Some styles call for specific capitalization.
Code variable names — Transform plain text into proper variable naming conventions.
The Efficiency Argument
Is retyping a few sentences really that hard? No. But:
- It takes time
- It's error-prone (easy to miss a letter)
- It adds friction to your workflow
- It gets annoying when you do it often
Tools that save small amounts of time repeatedly add up. If case conversion is something you do regularly, having a tool bookmarked makes sense.
How Title Case Works
Title case follows specific rules about which words to capitalize:
Always capitalize: First word, last word, nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs
Usually don't capitalize: Short prepositions (in, on, at), articles (a, an, the), conjunctions (and, but, or)
Our converter handles these rules so you don't have to memorize them.
Give It a Try
Next time you need text in a different case, use our converter instead of retyping.
Free, instant, and handles as much text as you throw at it.
Working on content? Check out our word counter for tracking your text length.