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Mastering PowerShell Scripting

You're reading from   Mastering PowerShell Scripting Automate and manage your environment using PowerShell 7.1

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800206540
Length 788 pages
Edition 4th 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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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to PowerShell 2. Modules and Snap-Ins FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Objects in PowerShell 4. Operators 5. Variables, Arrays, and Hashtables 6. Conditional Statements and Loops 7. Working with .NET 8. Strings, Numbers, and Dates 9. Regular Expressions 10. Files, Folders, and the Registry 11. Windows Management Instrumentation 12. Working with HTML, XML, and JSON 13. Web Requests and Web Services 14. Remoting and Remote Management 15. Asynchronous Processing 16. Graphical User Interfaces 17. Scripts, Functions, and Script Blocks 18. Parameters, Validation, and Dynamic Parameters 19. Classes and Enumerations 20. Building Modules 21. Testing 22. Error Handling 23. Debugging and Troubleshooting 24. Other Books You May Enjoy
25. Index

Namespaces

A namespace is used to organize types into a hierarchy, grouping types with related functionality together. A namespace can be considered like a folder in a file system.

PowerShell is for the most part implemented in the System.Management.Automation namespace. This namespace has associated documentation: https://docs.microsoft.com/dotnet/api/system.management.automation?view=powershellsdk-7.0.0.

Similarly, types used to work with the filesystem are grouped together in the System.IO namespace: https://docs.microsoft.com/dotnet/api/system.io.

For the following given type name, the namespace is everything before the final label. The namespace value is accessible as a property of the type:

PS> [System.IO.File].Namespace
System.IO

In PowerShell, the System namespace is implicit. The System.AppDomain type was used at the start of the chapter to show which assemblies PowerShell is currently using. This can be shortened to:

[AppDomain]::CurrentDomain...
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