Windows PowerShell 1.0 Essentials
- Installing Windows PowerShell 1.0
- The Basics of the Windows PowerShell 1.0 Interactive Shell
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Commands and Aliases
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 String Quoting and Escape Sequences
- Directing and Formatting Windows PowerShell 1.0 Output
- Understanding and Creating Windows PowerShell 1.0 Variables
- Basic Windows PowerShell 1.0 Types
- Working with Arrays in Windows PowerShell 1.0
- Creating a Windows PowerShell Array
- Creating Windows PowerShell Multidimensional Arrays
- Obtaining the Length of an Array
- Accessing Elements in a Windows PowerShell Array
- Accessing Elements in a Windows PowerShell Multidimensional Array
- Adding new Elements to a Windows PowerShell Array
- Combining Windows PowerShell Arrays
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Hashtables
- Creating PowerShell Hashtables
- Accessing Hashtable Elements
- Modifying Windows PowerShell Hashtable Elements
- Adding Elements to a Windows PowerShell Hashtable
- Removing Elements from a Windows PowerShell Hashtable
- Clearing All Elements from a Windows PowerShell Hashtable
- Combining Hashtables
- Listing Hashtable Count, Keys and Values
- Basic Windows PowerShell 1.0 Operators
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Comparison and Containment Operators
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Pipes and Redirection
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Flow Control with if, else and elseif
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Looping with the for and foreach Statements
- Windows PowerShell 1.0 Looping with do and while Statements
- The Windows PowerShell 1.0 switch Statement
- Why Use a switch Statement?
- Windows PowerShell switch Statement Syntax
- A switch Statement Example
- Explaining the Example
- Using break in a Windows PowerShell switch Statement
- The switch $_ Variable
- Using Expressions in a Windows PowerShell switch Statement
- Wildcards, Regular Expressions and Case Sensitivity in switch Statements
- Using switch Statements to Iterate Through Ranges and Collections
- Using the continue Statement