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Full Discussion: Lower case test condition
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Lower case test condition Post 302742245 by newbie2010 on Monday 10th of December 2012 08:25:21 PM
Old 12-10-2012
Lower case test condition

I want to locate directories that are upper, lower or have both upper and lower cases.

What I have is:

Code:
find /tmp/$var2 -type d' " ); [ -d $dir ] && echo "host case is incorrect" || echo "host case is correct"

This actually is part of a larger script and it does work but the problem is that it will report "case is correct" if the user enters an upper case directory and the upper case directory is there. If they enter lower case, and the lower case directory is there, it reports "case is correct." But what if both upper and lower case directories (for example, DAVID and david) exist?

I want to have the script say both upper and lower directories are there but I am not sure if I use [[:upper]] or if there is some test condition that will assist with this.

On the other hand, if there is only an upper case directory and no lower, I just want it to say "host case is correct."

Any assistance is appreciated. I have not much experience with test conditions and am not sure if I am on the right path.

Last edited by Scott; 12-11-2012 at 01:15 PM.. Reason: Code tags
 

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Tcl_UtfToUpper(3)					      Tcl Library Procedures						 Tcl_UtfToUpper(3)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
Tcl_UniCharToUpper, Tcl_UniCharToLower, Tcl_UniCharToTitle, Tcl_UtfToUpper, Tcl_UtfToLower, Tcl_UtfToTitle - routines for manipulating the case of Unicode characters and UTF-8 strings SYNOPSIS
#include <tcl.h> Tcl_UniChar Tcl_UniCharToUpper(ch) Tcl_UniChar Tcl_UniCharToLower(ch) Tcl_UniChar Tcl_UniCharToTitle(ch) int Tcl_UtfToUpper(str) int Tcl_UtfToLower(str) int Tcl_UtfToTitle(str) ARGUMENTS
int ch (in) The Tcl_UniChar to be converted. char *str (in/out) Pointer to UTF-8 string to be converted in place. _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The first three routines convert the case of individual Unicode characters: If ch represents a lower-case character, Tcl_UniCharToUpper returns the corresponding upper-case character. If no upper-case character is defined, it returns the character unchanged. If ch represents an upper-case character, Tcl_UniCharToLower returns the corresponding lower-case character. If no lower-case character is defined, it returns the character unchanged. If ch represents a lower-case character, Tcl_UniCharToTitle returns the corresponding title-case character. If no title-case character is defined, it returns the corresponding upper-case character. If no upper-case character is defined, it returns the character unchanged. Title-case is defined for a small number of characters that have a different appearance when they are at the beginning of a capitalized word. The next three routines convert the case of UTF-8 strings in place in memory: Tcl_UtfToUpper changes every UTF-8 character in str to upper-case. Because changing the case of a character may change its size, the byte offset of each character in the resulting string may differ from its original location. Tcl_UtfToUpper writes a null byte at the end of the converted string. Tcl_UtfToUpper returns the new length of the string in bytes. This new length is guaranteed to be no longer than the original string length. Tcl_UtfToLower is the same as Tcl_UtfToUpper except it turns each character in the string into its lower-case equivalent. Tcl_UtfToTitle is the same as Tcl_UtfToUpper except it turns the first character in the string into its title-case equivalent and all fol- lowing characters into their lower-case equivalents. BUGS
At this time, the case conversions are only defined for the ISO8859-1 characters. Unicode characters above 0x00ff are not modified by these routines. KEYWORDS
utf, unicode, toupper, tolower, totitle, case Tcl 8.1 Tcl_UtfToUpper(3)
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