NAME
toupper
,
toupper_l
, _toupper
—
lower case to upper case letter
conversion
SYNOPSIS
#include
<ctype.h>
int
toupper
(int
c);
int
toupper_l
(int
c, locale_t
locale);
int
_toupper
(int
c);
DESCRIPTION
The
toupper
()
and
toupper_l
()
functions convert a lower-case letter to the corresponding upper-case
letter. The
_toupper
()
function is identical to toupper
() except that
c must be a lower-case letter.
OpenBSD always uses the C locale for these functions, ignoring the global locale, the thread-specific locale, and the locale argument.
RETURN VALUES
If the argument to the toupper
() or
toupper_l
() function is a lower-case letter, the
corresponding upper-case letter is returned if there is one; otherwise the
argument is returned unchanged. If the argument to the
_toupper
() function is a lower-case letter, the
corresponding upper-case letter is returned; otherwise the output is
undefined.
ENVIRONMENT
On systems supporting non-ASCII single-byte character encodings,
the results of toupper
() and
_toupper
() may depend on the
LC_CTYPE
locale(1).
SEE ALSO
isalnum(3), isalpha(3), isascii(3), isblank(3), iscntrl(3), isdigit(3), isgraph(3), islower(3), isprint(3), ispunct(3), isspace(3), isupper(3), isxdigit(3), stdio(3), toascii(3), tolower(3), towupper(3), ascii(7)
STANDARDS
The toupper
() function conforms to
ANSI X3.159-1989 (“ANSI C89”),
and toupper_l
() to IEEE Std
1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”).
HISTORY
The toupper
() function first appeared in
Version 7 AT&T UNIX and acquired the
current semantics in AT&T System III
UNIX, where _toupper
() first appeared.
The toupper_l
() function has been
available since OpenBSD 6.2.
CAVEATS
The argument c must be
EOF
or representable as an unsigned
char; otherwise, the result is undefined.