Case Converter

Convert text between camelCase, snake_case, PascalCase, kebab-case, dot.case, UPPERCASE, lowercase, Title Case, Capitalize, Capitalize Each, and tOGGLE cASE.

The case converter is a practical tool for transforming text into different casing formats. Many workflows depend on consistent casing, whether you are writing code, preparing data, or formatting content for publication.

Instead of adjusting text manually, this tool lets you convert between common formats such as camelCase, snake_case, kebab-case, and various title and letter cases with a single action.

When a Case Converter Is Useful

Different environments enforce different casing conventions. Using the wrong format can introduce errors, break integrations, or simply require unnecessary rework.

Word Counter The word counter is a straightforward tool for analyzing basic text statistics. It calculates word and character counts instantly as you type or paste content into the editor. Whether you are drafting an article, preparing documentation, or reviewing written work, having immediate feedback on text length and structure can help you stay within limits and maintain clarity. What the Word Counter Measures The tool provides the following statistics: Word count – Total number of words. Character count – Total characters including spaces. Character count (without spaces) – Useful for platforms that exclude whitespace from limits. Sentence count – Number of detected sentences. Paragraph count – Based on line breaks. Estimated reading time – Approximate time required to read the text at an average pace. Average word length – Total characters divided by total words. Text density – A simple indicator of how compact the text is. What “Text Density” Means Text density reflects how tightly packed the content is. It is calculated by comparing the number of non-space characters to the total character count. Text with many short words and frequent spacing tends to have lower density. Text with longer words and fewer spaces tends to have higher density. Density does not measure quality, but it can give a quick signal about writing style. Technical or academic texts often have higher density due to longer terminology, while conversational writing tends to be lighter and more spaced. When a Word Counter Is Useful Different platforms and workflows impose length constraints or formatting expectations. Writing & publishing: Articles, essays, and submissions often have minimum or maximum word counts. SEO & content planning: Character limits for titles and meta descriptions require precision. Academic work: Essays and abstracts are frequently word-limited. Social media & ads: Many platforms enforce strict character limits. Editing & revision: Monitoring sentence and paragraph counts can help improve structure and readability. A word counter provides immediate feedback, helping you adjust content without manual counting or guesswork. How to Use the Word Counter Paste or type your text into the input field. Review the statistics displayed automatically. Edit as needed and copy your finalized text. The tool is designed to stay out of the way. It simply provides clear metrics so you can focus on writing.

A case converter helps keep text consistent and reduces the risk of subtle mistakes caused by mismatched formatting.

Supported Text Cases

How to Use the Case Converter

  1. Paste or type your text into the input field.
  2. Select the case format you need.
  3. Copy the converted text for immediate use.

This tool is designed to be fast and straightforward: no configuration, no accounts, and no unnecessary steps. It simply converts text so you can move on with your work. If you are preparing content, you may also want to check word and character counts.