<
text> Whether a text matching operation distinguishes
upper-
case (capital) letters from lower
case (is "
case
sensitive") or not ("
case insensitive").
Case in file names should be preserved (for readability) but
ignored when matching (so the user doesn't have to get it
right).
MS-DOS does not preserve
case in file names,
Unix
preserves
case and matches are
case sensitive.
Any decent
text editor will allow the user to specify
whether or not text searches should be
case sensitive.
Case sensitivity is also relevant in programming (most
programming languages distiguish between
case in the names of
identifiers), and addressing (
Internet domain names are
case insensitive but
RFC 822 local
mailbox names are
case
sensitive).
Case insensitive operations are sometimes said to "fold
case",
from the idea of folding the character code table so that
upper and lower
case letters coincide. The alternative "smash
case" is more likely to be used by someone who considers this
behaviour a
misfeature or in cases where one
case is
actually permanently converted to the other.
"
MS-DOS will automatically smash
case in the names of all
the files you create".
(1997-07-09)