String.ToLowerInvariant Method
Definition
Important
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Returns a copy of this String object converted to lowercase using the casing rules of the invariant culture.
public:
System::String ^ ToLowerInvariant();
public string ToLowerInvariant ();
member this.ToLowerInvariant : unit -> string
Public Function ToLowerInvariant () As String
Returns
The lowercase equivalent of the current string.
Examples
The following example defines a string array that contains a single word in a number of languages. The ToLowerInvariant method is used to populate the elements of a parallel array with the case-insensitive version of each word. The Array.Sort<TKey,TValue>(TKey[], TValue[], IComparer<TKey>) method is used to sort the case-sensitive array based on the order of elements in the lowercase array to ensure that elements appear in the same order regardless of language.
using System;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
string[] words = { "Tuesday", "Salı", "Вторник", "Mardi",
"Τρίτη", "Martes", "יום שלישי",
"الثلاثاء", "วันอังคาร" };
// Display array in unsorted order.
foreach (string word in words)
Console.WriteLine(word);
Console.WriteLine();
// Create parallel array of words by calling ToLowerInvariant.
string[] lowerWords = new string[words.Length];
for (int ctr = words.GetLowerBound(0); ctr <= words.GetUpperBound(0); ctr++)
lowerWords[ctr] = words[ctr].ToLowerInvariant();
// Sort the words array based on the order of lowerWords.
Array.Sort(lowerWords, words, StringComparer.InvariantCulture);
// Display the sorted array.
foreach (string word in words)
Console.WriteLine(word);
}
}
// The example displays the following output:
// Tuesday
// Salı
// Вторник
// Mardi
// Τρίτη
// Martes
// יום שלישי
// الثلاثاء
// วันอังคาร
//
// Mardi
// Martes
// Salı
// Tuesday
// Τρίτη
// Вторник
// יום שלישי
// الثلاثاء
// วันอังคาร
open System
let words =
[| "Tuesday"; "Salı"; "Вторник"; "Mardi"
"Τρίτη"; "Martes"; "יום שלישי"
"الثلاثاء"; "วันอังคาร" |]
// Display array in unsorted order.
for word in words do
printfn $"{word}"
printfn ""
// Create parallel array of words by calling ToLowerInvariant.
let lowerWords =
words |> Array.map (fun x -> x.ToLowerInvariant())
// Sort the words array based on the order of lowerWords.
Array.Sort(lowerWords, words, StringComparer.InvariantCulture)
// Display the sorted array.
for word in words do
printfn $"{word}"
// The example displays the following output:
// Tuesday
// Salı
// Вторник
// Mardi
// Τρίτη
// Martes
// יום שלישי
// الثلاثاء
// วันอังคาร
//
// Mardi
// Martes
// Salı
// Tuesday
// Τρίτη
// Вторник
// יום שלישי
// الثلاثاء
// วันอังคาร
Module Example
Public Sub Main()
Dim words() As String = { "Tuesday", "Salı", "Вторник", "Mardi", _
"Τρίτη", "Martes", "יום שלישי", _
"الثلاثاء", "วันอังคาร" }
' Display array in unsorted order.
For Each word As String In words
Console.WriteLine(word)
Next
Console.WriteLine()
' Create parallel array of words by calling ToLowerInvariant.
Dim lowerWords(words.Length - 1) As String
For ctr As Integer = words.GetLowerBound(0) To words.GetUpperBound(0)
lowerWords(ctr) = words(ctr).ToLowerInvariant()
Next
' Sort the words array based on the order of lowerWords.
Array.Sort(lowerWords, words, StringComparer.InvariantCulture)
' Display the sorted array.
For Each word As String In words
Console.WriteLine(word)
Next
End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
' Tuesday
' Salı
' Вторник
' Mardi
' Τρίτη
' Martes
' יום שלישי
' الثلاثاء
' วันอังคาร
'
' Mardi
' Martes
' Salı
' Tuesday
' Τρίτη
' Вторник
' יום שלישי
' الثلاثاء
' วันอังคาร
Remarks
The invariant culture represents a culture that is culture-insensitive. It is associated with the English language but not with a specific country or region. For more information, see the CultureInfo.InvariantCulture property.
If your application depends on the case of a string changing in a predictable way that is unaffected by the current culture, use the ToLowerInvariant method. The ToLowerInvariant method is equivalent to ToLower(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)
. The method is recommended when a collection of strings must appear in a predictable order in a user interface control.
Note
This method does not modify the value of the current instance. Instead, it returns a new string in which all characters in the current instance are converted to lowercase.
If you need the lowercase or uppercase version of an operating system identifier, such as a file name, named pipe, or registry key, use the ToLowerInvariant or ToUpperInvariant methods.