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Learn PowerShell Core 6.0

You're reading from  Learn PowerShell Core 6.0

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788838986
Pages 552 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
David das Neves David das Neves
Profile icon David das Neves
Jan-Hendrik Peters Jan-Hendrik Peters
Profile icon Jan-Hendrik Peters
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters close

Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. Current PowerShell Versions 2. PowerShell ISE Versus VSCode 3. Basic Coding Techniques 4. Advanced Coding Techniques 5. Writing Reusable Code 6. Working with Data 7. Understanding PowerShell Security 8. Just Enough Administration 9. DevOps with PowerShell 10. Creating Your Own PowerShell Repository 11. VSCode and PowerShell Release Pipelines 12. PowerShell Desired State Configuration 13. Working with Windows 14. Working with Azure 15. Connecting to Microsoft Online Services 16. Working with SCCM and SQL Server 17. PowerShell Deep Dives 1. PowerShell ISE Hotkeys 2. Assessments 3. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Custom formatting


When writing your own code and executing PowerShell statements, you might have noticed that the formatting changes from time to time. Cmdlets such as Get-Process display their results in a neat table, Get-ChildItem adds the parent directory to the formatted output, and so on.

PowerShell can be extended by your own custom formatting for all kinds of objects as well. This way you can set a template to be applied to, for example, all ADUser objects because you don't want the default list format. Or, you define the format for your own objects that your function returns.

Creating the formatting can be done by altering XML files, which can be exported from existing data or created new. Using the cmdlet Update-FormatData it is possible to import and apply the desired format. Prepending the custom format will allow you to override internal formatting for objects, while appending the data is useful for adding format data to new object types. These are most likely .NET types that you...

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