Text Case Converter
Convert text to title case, sentence case, camelCase, snake_case, and more.
What to know before you run it
Convert text to title case, sentence case, camelCase, snake_case, and more.
Convert text to title case, sentence case, camelCase, snake_case, and more. Switch naming styles for copy, code variables, slugs, and documentation from one input box.
Text cleanup mistakes are usually subtle, so the page keeps the risky parts visible: what changed, what stayed untouched, and what still needs another pass.
- Eight common case styles
- One-click conversion buttons
- Copy-ready result output
Quick start with Text Case Converter
- 1 Open Text Case Converter, then paste the text or line block that needs cleanup. A realistic starting input is "A heading, variable name, or slug candidate that should switch to a different case style".
- 2 Run the cleanup action and compare the result with the original to confirm that the right characters, counts, or order changed. Check separators, acronym handling, and whether the target style is meant for people, machines, or both.
- 3 Publish or copy the cleaned version, or move into another text tool if the task still needs counting, sorting, or URL-safe output.
When naming style is the actual task
The string is mostly correct but the naming convention is wrong for the next destination.
- Open Text Case Converter when copied text, keywords, lines, or naming blocks are technically usable but still too messy for the next publishing, SEO, or documentation step.
- Use it before publishing snippets, sharing details, cleaning lists, or moving text into code, URLs, content forms, or link blocks.
- These tools are strongest when the decision is about readability, consistency, limits, or order rather than about heavy file processing.
What a reusable naming result means
The output should be consistent enough to paste into the next system without another manual edit.
- The result makes it easier to see whether the text is cleaner, shorter, consistently named, or ordered well enough for the next destination.
- A visible cleaned output reduces subtle issues such as duplicate lines, wasted spaces, inconsistent case, or ordering mistakes that hurt reuse later.
- The next step becomes clearer as well: publish this version, count it, slugify it, or send it into another text-oriented cleanup tool.
Naming examples that mirror real publishing and code work
These examples focus on strings that need to switch cleanly between human-readable and machine-friendly shapes.
Clean a copied list before reuse
A heading, variable name, or slug candidate that should switch to a different case style
Use the cleaned output to check spacing, order, or case before you paste it into the next field or document.
This turns a usable-but-messy draft into a reusable block with fewer manual edits later.
Match a strict publishing limit
A copied label list that should follow one naming rule before publication or import
Check the output or count summary before publishing so the next system does not reject the text or cut it awkwardly.
This is safer than guessing, especially when the destination treats spaces, punctuation, or casing differently.
Chain multiple cleanup steps deliberately
Converted text that still needs counting, deduping, or URL cleanup after the case pass
Treat the current output as one cleanup stage and move into the related text pages for the remaining steps.
That makes the task easier to audit and reduces the chance of losing the version you wanted to keep.
Where naming conversions become misleading
These checks help you avoid turning the right words into the wrong identifier shape.
- Do not assume cleanup preserved your meaning.
- Character and word tools answer different questions, so make sure you are checking the limit that matters in the next channel.
- If order, deduplication, and formatting all matter, split the task across the related text tools instead of expecting one page to solve every cleanup step perfectly.
Best next text steps after renaming
Once the naming style is right, these related pages help with limits, cleanup, and adjacent formatting work.
Word Counter
Count words, characters, sentences, paragraphs, and reading time.
Character Counter
Check character counts, space-free counts, lines, and supporting text metrics.
Remove Duplicate Lines
Clean duplicate lines from multi-line text with trimming and case options.
Other languages
Switch languages without losing this page.
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Open in Korean
Korean version
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Open in Japanese
Japanese version
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