|  | ANSI Common Lisp  13 Characters  13.2 Dictionary of Characters 
 
| 13.2.14  char-upcase, char-downcase | Function |  
 Syntax:
| char-upcase character |  corresponding-character |  | char-downcase character |  corresponding-character |  
Arguments and Values:
character, corresponding-character - a character.
Description:
If character is a lowercase character,
char-upcase returns the corresponding uppercase character.
Otherwise, char-upcase just returns the given character.
If character is an uppercase character,
char-downcase returns the corresponding lowercase character.
Otherwise, char-downcase just returns the given character.
 
The result only ever differs from character 
in its code attribute;
all implementation-defined attributes are preserved.
 
Examples:
 (char-upcase #\a)  #\A
 (char-upcase #\A)  #\A
 (char-downcase #\a)  #\a
 (char-downcase #\A)  #\a
 (char-upcase #\9)  #\9
 (char-downcase #\9)  #\9
 (char-upcase #\@)  #\@
 (char-downcase #\@)  #\@
 ;; Note that this next example might run for a very long time in 
 ;; some implementations if CHAR-CODE-LIMIT happens to be very large
 ;; for that implementation.
 (dotimes (code char-code-limit)
   (let ((char (code-char code)))
     (when char
       (unless (cond ((upper-case-p char) (char= (char-upcase (char-downcase char)) char))
                     ((lower-case-p char) (char= (char-downcase (char-upcase char)) char))
                     (t (and (char= (char-upcase (char-downcase char)) char)
                             (char= (char-downcase (char-upcase char)) char))))
         (return char)))))  NIL 
Exceptional Situations:
Should signal an error of type type-error if character is not a character.
See Also:
upper-case-p,
alpha-char-p,
Section 13.1.4.3 Characters With Case,
Section 13.1.10 Documentation of Implementation-Defined Scripts
Notes:
If the corresponding-char is different than character,
then both the character and the corresponding-char have case.
Since char-equal ignores the case of the characters it compares,
the corresponding-character is always the same as character
under char-equal.
 
Allegro CL Implementation Details:
 None. |