Overview#
Case-sensitive is when distinguishing UPPERCASE and lowercase letters.Often used in computer science to indicate a distinction is made in comparison or EQUALITY of letters based on case.
Example#
A case-sensitive password will NOT recognize "Password" and "password" as the same, but a case-insensitive comparison would.Matching Rules that are Case-sensitive#
More Information#
There might be more information for this subject on one of the following:- 1.2.840.113556.1.4.1362
- Alg
- Amr
- At_hash
- Aud
- AuthPasswordSyntax
- Authentication Context Class Reference
- Authorization Request Parameters
- Authorized party
- BooleanMatch
- C_hash
- Case Sensitivity
- Case-insensitive
- Case-sensitive
- CaseExactMatch
- CaseExactString
- CaseExactSubstringsMatch
- Distinguished Name Case Sensitivity
- Distinguished Names
- Email Address
- Enc
- Etag
- Identity Token Claims
- Iss
- JDBC-Driver-Status-Column
- JWK Set
- Jti
- Kinit
- LDAP filters Syntax and Choices
- LDAPPasswordsFor8.7.3.x
- MAY
- MUST
- MUST NOT
- Microsoft Active Directory Syntax
- NDSD_TRY_NMASLOGIN_FIRST
- Ndsenvlocal
- Ndsrepair
- OAuth Scopes
- OpenID Connect Claims
- Oracle Passwords
- Password Character Composition
- Publisher Event Log
- Resource Access Control Facility
- SCIM Schema
- SCIM Sorting
- SCIM meta
- SHALL
- SHOULD
- SHOULD NOT
- SOAPDSMLDriver
- S_hash
- StringOrURI
- Sub
- URL