my first question here 🙂
Did my best reading the rules and searching if the question was already asked before.
The following code
String[] strings = {"cAsE", "\u00df"};
for (String str : strings) {
System.out.println(str.equalsIgnoreCase(str.toLowerCase()));
System.out.println(str.equalsIgnoreCase(str.toUpperCase()));
}
outputs true 3 times (cAsE = case; cAsE = CASE; ß = ß)
but also 1 false (ß != SS).
Tried using toLowerCase(Locale) but it did’t help.
Is this a known issue?
Until recently, Unicode didn’t define an uppercase version of s-sharp. I’m not sure whether the latest Java 7 version does already include this new character and whether it handles it correctly. I suggest to give it a try.
The reason why
str.toLowerCase()doesn’t return the same asstr.toUpperCase().toLowerCase()is that Java replacesßwithSSbut there is no way to go back, soSSbecomesssand the compare fails.So if you need to level the case, you must use
str.toLowerCase(). If not, then simply callingequalsIgnoreCase()without any upper/lower conversion should work, too.