(Also the first E is really É, but one is allowed to omit diacritics on uppercase letters.)
This (allowance to omit) comes from the days of mechanical typewriters, many of which could put accents on lowercase letters but not on uppercase ones. There’s really no reason for it now (or ever, in handwriting).
Well, there is something of an analogous issue now, namely that accented uppercase letters are infrequent enough that I can never remember the codes, and always have to look them up: while I’ll never forget Alt+0233 for é, I had already forgotten Alt+0201 for É after looking it up yesterday.
That having been said, I certainly agree that “Égalité” looks better than “Egalité”.
This (allowance to omit) comes from the days of mechanical typewriters, many of which could put accents on lowercase letters but not on uppercase ones. There’s really no reason for it now (or ever, in handwriting).
Well, there is something of an analogous issue now, namely that accented uppercase letters are infrequent enough that I can never remember the codes, and always have to look them up: while I’ll never forget Alt+0233 for é, I had already forgotten Alt+0201 for É after looking it up yesterday.
That having been said, I certainly agree that “Égalité” looks better than “Egalité”.
No need to remember them; just subtract 32.