TOLOWER(3C) Standard C Library Functions TOLOWER(3C)

tolower, tolower_l - transliterate upper-case characters to lower-case

#include <ctype.h>
int tolower(int c);

int tolower_l(int c, locale_t loc);

The tolower() function has as a domain of type int, the value of which is representable as an unsigned char or the value of EOF. If the argument has any other value, the argument is returned unchanged. If the argument of tolower() represents an upper-case letter, and there exists a corresponding lower-case letter (as defined by character type information in the locale category LC_CTYPE), the result is the corresponding lower-case letter. All other arguments in the domain are returned unchanged.

The function tolower_l() behaves identically to tolower(), except instead of operating in the current locale, it operates in the locale specified by loc.

A macro form, _tolower() exists. It is defined for standards conformance, particularly with legacy standards. It was deprecated in POSIX 2008 (Issue 7), and its use is discouraged. The macro, on this system, is just an alias for tolower().

On successful completion, tolower() returns the lower-case letter corresponding to the argument passed. Otherwise, it returns the argument unchanged.

No errors are defined.

See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE
CSI Enabled
Interface Stability Standard
MT-Level MT-Safe

newlocale(3C), setlocale(3C), uselocale(3C), attributes(7), standards(7)

October 4, 2015 OmniOS