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Mastering Windows PowerShell Scripting (Second Edition)

You're reading from   Mastering Windows PowerShell Scripting (Second Edition) One-stop guide to automating administrative tasks

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787126305
Length 440 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Chris Dent Chris Dent
Author Profile Icon Chris Dent
Chris Dent
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to PowerShell FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with PowerShell 3. Modules and Snap-Ins 4. Working with Objects in PowerShell 5. Operators 6. Variables, Arrays, and Hashtables 7. Branching and Looping 8. Working with .NET 9. Data Parsing and Manipulation 10. Regular Expressions 11. Files, Folders, and the Registry 12. Windows Management Instrumentation 13. HTML, XML, and JSON 14. Working with REST and SOAP 15. Remoting and Remote Management 16. Testing 17. Error Handling

Character classes


A character class is used to match a single character to a set of possible characters. A character class is denoted using square brackets ([ ]).

For example, a character class may contain each of the vowels:

'get' -match 'g[aeiou]t' 
'got' -match 'g[aeiou]'

Within a character class, the special or reserved characters are as follows:

  • -: Used to define a range
  • \: Escape character
  • ^: Negates the character class

Ranges

The hyphen is used to define a range of characters. For example, we might want to match any number repeated one or more times (using +):

'1st place' -match '[0-9]+'    # $matches[0] is "1" 
'23rd place' -match '[0-9]+'   # $matches[0] is "23"

A range in a character class can be any range of ASCII characters, such as the following examples:

  • a-z
  • A-K
  • 0-9
  • 1-5
  • !-9 (0-9 and the ASCII characters 33 to 47)

The following returns true as " is character 34 and # is character 35 that is, they are within the range !-9:

PS> '"#' -match '[!-9]+'; $matches[0]
True
"#

The range notation allows...

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