Other than making reports more readable, are there other reasons to use the upper/lower function of eval?
Lookup table case-sensitivity issues: If your lookup isn't supporting case_sensitive_match=false (in transforms.conf), you can use eval to set your field-values to match the 'case' of what a Lookup table entries.
Character legibility: Some tables, stats, reports, etc. can cause one to confuse certain number-letter combinations (such as you might see in a host_name). In this case, one might consider using eval with 'upper' to help distinguish the characters displayed.
Better as eye-candy: E.G. "IF", most values in a table may be all UPPER cased, except for one. Now, you have an inconsistent view (..a Sesame Street condition: one of these is not like the other). So, using eval with 'upper', you can now set the last remaining field values to be consistent with the rest of the report. Same goes for using lower in the opposite condition.
Business use-case: Your organization may mandate certain 'case' usage in various reports, etc.
Personal preference: You just want to see the other case used.
Sentence Case option: Using an additional PARAM in eval ('substr'), you could make the value proper Sentence Case, based on the pre-existing value and your need(s). Below is an example:
It depends entirely on your use-case. Is there a specific reason for asking the question? If you don't know what you'd need upper/lower for, you won't need it either. There are a range of situations I could think of where it could prove useful - using upper/lower for being able to compare mixed-case value comes to mind for instance.
The way I see it you're asking the question a bit backwards. What the function does is explained in the docs. What you can use it for is - like any functions in any programming language and other - entirely up to you.
Well, if I do not know what the possible uses for the command are, then it is hard to use it. Which is why I asked the question. Using it to compare mixed case values is a good example.