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

Manipulating strings

The .NET System.String type offers a wide array of methods for manipulating or inspecting strings. The following methods are case-sensitive but are, in many cases, faster alternatives to using regular expressions, for situations when the time it takes for a script to run is important.

Working with data held in strings is an important part of any scripting language. The following sections explore selecting parts of a string, splitting, replacing, trimming, inserting, removing, and more.

Indexing into strings

In PowerShell, it is possible to access individual characters in a string by index (the zero-based position of a character) in the same way that you would access array elements using an index. Consider the following example:

$myString = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' 
$myString[0]     # This is a (the first character in the string) 
$myString[-1]    # This is z (the last character in the string) 

Ranges of characters can be selected...