You use a capital D in director when it is used as part of a person's name. For example, Director John Doe. If you would not capitalize the D if you were to say John Doe works is the director, because director is not used as part of his name in this example.
It needs an upper case D.
No. Title Case is when the first letter in every word of a sentence is capitalised: This Sentence Is Written In Title Case As All Words Have Their First Letter As A Capital.
Not sure how the upper case and lower case letters interact. If that can be ignored then rj.Not sure how the upper case and lower case letters interact. If that can be ignored then rj.Not sure how the upper case and lower case letters interact. If that can be ignored then rj.Not sure how the upper case and lower case letters interact. If that can be ignored then rj.
upper case
Both. "Case sensitive" means that upper case and lower case characters are treated as different characters.
Use the UPPER function
THIS IS UPPER CASE & this is lower case. So it is basically CAPITAL and small letters.
upper case
Upper and lower case came from when everything used to be printed by hand. The letters would be inside of a brief case. The upper case would be kept on the top of the case and the lower case on the bottom.
no.
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz <----lower case. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ <---uppercase.
WikiAnswers doesn't discriminate between upper and lower case. If someone types in lower case, the system will not 'auto-correct'
These are upper case letters, a.k.a. capital letters: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ These are lower case letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz They got those names because back in the days of manual typesetting, typesetters stored the capital letters in the upper case and the others in the lower case.