CamelCase to normal String in JavaScript

Suyash Vashishtha - Sep 7 '22 - - Dev Community

In this post we will see how we can turn any camelCase string to normal string in JS JavaScript..

Step 1 - Breaking the Camel Case

Lets take an example - "checkThisOutBro"

Now we want to break this camelCase string to "Check This Out Bro".

So, In order to do this we will use a regex

const camelToFlat=(camel)=>{
    const camelCase =camel.replace(/([a-z])([A-Z])/g, '$1 $2')

    return camelCase
}

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this will give us

check This Out Bro

hmmmmm, well atleast it is now a simple string, lets improve it better

Step 2 - Taking every letter out from this string...

So after getting

check This Out Bro

we can use split() function with " " as args to break it down in an array with each word as element.


const camelToFlat=(camel)=>{
    const camelCase =camel.replace(/([a-z])([A-Z])/g, '$1 $2').split(" ")

    return camelCase
}


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This will return [ 'check', 'This', 'Out', 'Bro' ] as output and we now have an array of words in that camelCase.

"Wow Suyash you said we will be changing camelCase to string , how come it is an array now huh ?"

BigBrainTime

Just wait a min, we will make it a string again but better !

Step 3 - Making each First letter capital this time !

Now as we have an array of words for a string, we can simply run a loop and make every letter or char at 0 index upperCase.


const camelToFlat=(camel)=>{
    const camelCase =camel.replace(/([a-z])([A-Z])/g, '$1 $2').split(" ")

    let flat =""

    camelCase.forEach(word=>{    
        flat = flat + word.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + word.slice(1) + " "
    })  
    return flat
}



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After doing this, our function will take every word in camelCase array and convert it's first letter ( at 0 index) capital and join it with others to make an string

Magik
"POOOOOF ! Magic"

And now our output will be Check This Out Bro

Snippet Sauce link for code snippet !


This is commonly used while rendering keys of an object in applications ( Objects.keys(yourObject) returns array ). And generally keys are in camelCase so you want them to be a normal string but with a dynamic way..

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