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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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Toc

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

Hashtables


A hashtable is an associative array or an indexed array. Individual elements in the array are created with a unique key. Keys cannot be duplicated within the hashtable.

Hashtables are important in PowerShell. They are used to create custom objects, to pass parameters into commands, to create custom properties using Select-Object, and as the type for values assigned to parameter values of many different commands, and so on.

Note

For finding commands that use Hashtable as a parameter, we use the following:Get-Command -ParameterType Hashtable

This topic explores creating hashtables, selecting elements, enumerating all values in a hashtable, as well as adding and removing elements.

Creating a hashtable

An empty hashtable is created the same as the following:

$hashtable = @{}

A hashtable with a few objects looks the same as the following:

$hashtable = @{Key1 = "Value1"; Key2 = "Value2"}

Elements in a hashtable may be spread across multiple lines:

$hashtable = @{ 
    Key1 = "Value1" 
    Key2...
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