Book Image

Learn PowerShell Core 6.0

By : David das Neves, Jan-Hendrik Peters
Book Image

Learn PowerShell Core 6.0

By: David das Neves, Jan-Hendrik Peters

Overview of this book

Beginning with an overview of the different versions of PowerShell, Learn PowerShell Core 6.0 introduces you to VSCode and then dives into helping you understand the basic techniques in PowerShell scripting. You will cover advanced coding techniques, learn how to write reusable code as well as store and load data with PowerShell. This book will help you understand PowerShell security and Just Enough Administration, enabling you to create your own PowerShell repository. The last set of chapters will guide you in setting up, configuring, and working with Release Pipelines in VSCode and VSTS, and help you understand PowerShell DSC. In addition to this, you will learn how to use PowerShell with Windows, Azure, Microsoft Online Services, SCCM, and SQL Server. The final chapter will provide you with some use cases and pro tips. By the end of this book, you will be able to create professional reusable code using security insight and knowledge of working with PowerShell Core 6.0 and its most important capabilities.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Comments


I'd like to introduce comments right at the beginning. As you may know (from other scripting or coding languages), comments are necessary to describe and explain your code. Developers often argue that code is self-explanatory, but that is a lie. You will quickly learn that, even when working with your own scripts, it is always good to have some comments on the side. You can use either line comments or comment blocks in PowerShell, which make use of the key character (#), and look as follows:

# this is a comment line
## this as well

<#
this is a comment block
#>

<# this as well
       this as well
this as well
#>

As we are starting with the basics, you should know that there are some best practices for writing code. We will provide many of them throughout this book, but the most important one is to always provide comments with your code, to help the reader, other coders, or even yourself, if you need to reuse or debug your code. If you need to write multiline comments...