Titlecasing a string with exceptions

Is there a standard way in Python to titlecase a string (i.e. words start with uppercase characters, all remaining cased characters have lowercase) but leaving articles like and, in, and of lowercased?


There are a few problems with this. If you use split and join, some white space characters will be ignored. The built-in capitalize and title methods do not ignore white space.

>>> 'There     is a way'.title()
'There     Is A Way'

If a sentence starts with an article, you do not want the first word of a title in lowercase.

Keeping these in mind:

import re 
def title_except(s, exceptions):
    word_list = re.split(' ', s)       # re.split behaves as expected
    final = [word_list[0].capitalize()]
    for word in word_list[1:]:
        final.append(word if word in exceptions else word.capitalize())
    return " ".join(final)

articles = ['a', 'an', 'of', 'the', 'is']
print title_except('there is a    way', articles)
# There is a    Way
print title_except('a whim   of an elephant', articles)
# A Whim   of an Elephant

Use the titlecase.py module! Works only for English.

>>> from titlecase import titlecase
>>> titlecase('i am a foobar bazbar')
'I Am a Foobar Bazbar'

GitHub: https://github.com/ppannuto/python-titlecase


There are these methods:

>>> mytext = u'i am a foobar bazbar'
>>> print mytext.capitalize()
I am a foobar bazbar
>>> print mytext.title()
I Am A Foobar Bazbar

There's no lowercase article option. You'd have to code that yourself, probably by using a list of articles you want to lower.


Stuart Colville has made a Python port of a Perl script written by John Gruber to convert strings into title case but avoids capitalizing small words based on rules from the New York Times Manual of style, as well as catering for several special cases.

Some of the cleverness of these scripts:

  • they capitalizes small words like if, in, of, on, etc., but will un-capitalize them if they’re erroneously capitalized in the input.

  • the scripts assume that words with capitalized letters other than the first character are already correctly capitalized. This means they will leave a word like “iTunes” alone, rather than mangling it into “ITunes” or, worse, “Itunes”.

  • they skip over any words with line dots; “example.com” and “del.icio.us” will remain lowercase.

  • they have hard-coded hacks specifically to deal with odd cases, like “AT&T” and “Q&A”, both of which contain small words (at and a) which normally should be lowercase.

  • The first and last word of the title are always capitalized, so input such as “Nothing to be afraid of” will be turned into “Nothing to Be Afraid Of”.

  • A small word after a colon will be capitalized.

You can download it here.


capitalize (word)

This should do. I get it differently.

>>> mytext = u'i am a foobar bazbar'
>>> mytext.capitalize()
u'I am a foobar bazbar'
>>>

Ok as said in reply above, you have to make a custom capitalize:

mytext = u'i am a foobar bazbar'

def xcaptilize(word):
    skipList = ['a', 'an', 'the', 'am']
    if word not in skipList:
        return word.capitalize()
    return word

k = mytext.split(" ") 
l = map(xcaptilize, k)
print " ".join(l)   

This outputs

I am a Foobar Bazbar