s = s.replace(/(w)(w*)/g,
function(g0,g1,g2){return g1.toUpperCase() + g2.toLowerCase();});
The regex finds words (here defined using w
- alphanumerics and underscores), and separates them to two groups - first letter and rest of the word. It then uses a function as a callback to set the proper case.
Example: http://jsbin.com/uvase
Alternately, this will also work - a little less regex and more string manipulation:
s = s.replace(/w+/g,
function(w){return w[0].toUpperCase() + w.slice(1).toLowerCase();});
I should add this isn't pascal case at all, since you have word barriers (helloworld
vs hello-world
). Without them, the problem is almost unsolvable, even with a dictionary. This is more commonly called Title Case, though it doesn't handle words like "FBI", "the" or "McDonalds".
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