iswupper (3)





NAME

       iswupper - test for uppercase wide character


SYNOPSIS

       #include <wctype.h>

       int iswupper(wint_t wc);


DESCRIPTION

       The  iswupper  function is the wide-character equivalent of the isupper
       function. It tests whether wc is a wide character belonging to the wide
       character class "upper".

       The  wide  character  class "upper" is a subclass of the wide character
       class "alpha", and therefore also a  subclass  of  the  wide  character
       class  "alnum",  of  the  wide  character class "graph" and of the wide
       character class "print".

       Being a subclass of the wide character class "print", the wide  charac-
       ter class "upper" is disjoint from the wide character class "cntrl".

       Being  a subclass of the wide character class "graph", the wide charac-
       ter class "upper" is disjoint from the wide character class "space" and
       its subclass "blank".

       Being  a subclass of the wide character class "alnum", the wide charac-
       ter class "upper" is disjoint from the wide character class "punct".

       Being a subclass of the wide character class "alpha", the wide  charac-
       ter class "upper" is disjoint from the wide character class "digit".

       The  wide character class "upper" contains at least those characters wc
       which are equal to towupper(wc) and different from towlower(wc).

       The wide character class "upper" always contains at least  the  letters
       'A' to 'Z'.


RETURN VALUE

       The  iswupper  function  returns  non-zero  if  wc  is a wide character
       belonging to the wide character class  "upper".  Otherwise  it  returns
       zero.


CONFORMING TO

       ISO/ANSI C, UNIX98


SEE ALSO

       isupper(3), iswctype(3), towupper(3)


NOTES

       The  behaviour of iswupper depends on the LC_CTYPE category of the cur-
       rent locale.

       This function is not very appropriate for dealing with Unicode  charac-
       ters,  because  Unicode knows about three cases: upper, lower and title
       case.