Change text capitalisation in Pages on Mac
You can set Pages to automatically capitalise words at the beginning of sentences. You can also quickly make selected text all upper case or lower case, or format text as a title with the first letter of each word capitalised.
Capitalise sentences automatically
Go to the Pages app on your Mac.
Choose Pages > Settings (from the Pages menu at the top of your screen).
Click Auto-Correction at the top of the settings window.
In the Spelling section, select the tick box next to “Capitalise words automatically”.
This setting applies only to Pages, not to other applications on your Mac.
Modify capitalisation with formatting
Go to the Pages app on your Mac.
Open a document.
Select the text you want to change or click where you want to type new text.
To change all of the text in a text box or table cell, select the text box or table cell.
Note: Text typed in uppercase must be transformed to lowercase before formatting. See Modify capitalisation with transformations.
In the Format sidebar, click the Style button near the top.
If the text is in a text box, table or shape, first click the Text tab at the top of the sidebar, then click the Style button.
In the Font section, click , then click the Capitalisation pop-up menu and choose an option:
None: The text is left as you entered it, with no changes.
All Caps: All text is capitalised at the same height.
Small Caps: All text is capitalised with larger capitals for upper case letters.
Title Case: The first letter of each word (except for prepositions, articles and conjunctions) is capitalised — for example, Seven Wonders of the World.
Start Case: The first letter of each word is capitalised — for example, Seven Wonders Of The World.
Modify capitalisation with transformations
Go to the Pages app on your Mac.
Open a document.
Select the text you want to change, then choose Edit > Transformations (from the Edit menu at the top of your screen).
Choose an option to format selected text in all uppercase or all lowercase, or to capitalise the first letter of each word.