Book Image

Mastering PowerShell Scripting - Fourth Edition

By : Chris Dent
5 (1)
Book Image

Mastering PowerShell Scripting - Fourth Edition

5 (1)
By: Chris Dent

Overview of this book

PowerShell scripts offer a convenient way to automate various tasks, but working with them can be daunting. Mastering PowerShell Scripting takes away the fear and helps you navigate through PowerShell's capabilities.This extensively revised edition includes new chapters on debugging and troubleshooting and creating GUIs (online chapter). Learn the new features of PowerShell 7.1 by working with parameters, objects, and .NET classes from within PowerShell 7.1. This comprehensive guide starts with the basics before moving on to advanced topics, including asynchronous processing, desired state configuration, using more complex scripts and filters, debugging issues, and error-handling techniques. Explore how to efficiently manage substantial amounts of data and interact with other services using PowerShell 7.1. This book will help you to make the most of PowerShell's automation features, using different methods to parse data, manipulate regular expressions, and work with Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI).
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
24
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25
Index

Summary

In this chapter, we learned that variables can be created to contain information that is to be used in a function or a script.

Variable commands are available to interact with variables beyond changing the value, such as setting a description, making a variable in a specific scope, or making a variable private.

A variable scope affects how variables may be accessed. Variables are created in the local scope by default. Arrays are sets of objects of the same type. Arrays are immutable, and the size of an array cannot change after creation. Adding or removing elements from an array requires the creation of a new array. Hashtables are associative arrays. An element in a Hashtable is accessed using a unique key.

Lists, stacks, queues, and dictionaries are advanced collections that may be used when a particular behavior is required, or if they offer a desirable performance benefit. Chapter 6, Conditional Statements and Loops, explores branching and looping in PowerShell...