about_Arrays
Short description
Describes arrays, which are data structures designed to store collections of items.
Long description
An array is a data structure that's designed to store a collection of items. The items can be the same type or different types.
Beginning in Windows PowerShell 3.0, a collection of zero or one object has some properties of arrays.
Creating and initializing an array
To create and initialize an array, assign multiple values to a variable. The
values stored in the array are delimited with a comma and separated from the
variable name by the assignment operator (=
).
For example, to create an array named $A
that contains the seven numeric
(integer) values of 22, 5, 10, 8, 12, 9, and 80, type:
$A = 22,5,10,8,12,9,80
The comma can also be used to initialize a single item array by placing the comma before the single item.
For example, to create a single item array named $B
containing the single
value of 7, type:
$B = ,7
You can also create and initialize an array using the range operator (..
).
The following example creates an array containing the values 5 through 8.
$C = 5..8
As a result, $C
contains four values: 5, 6, 7, and 8.
When no data type is specified, PowerShell creates each array as an object
array (System.Object[]). To determine the data type of an array, use the
GetType()
method. For example:
$A.GetType()
To create a strongly typed array, that is, an array that can contain only values of a particular type, cast the variable as an array type, such as string[], long[], or int32[]. To cast an array, precede the variable name with an array type enclosed in brackets. For example:
[int32[]]$ia = 1500, 2230, 3350, 4000
As a result, the $ia
array can contain only integers.
You can create arrays that are cast to any supported type in the .NET. For
example, the objects that Get-Process
retrieves to represent processes are of
the System.Diagnostics.Process type. To create a strongly typed array of
process objects, enter the following command:
[Diagnostics.Process[]]$zz = Get-Process
The array sub-expression operator
The array sub-expression operator creates an array from the statements inside it. Whatever the statement inside the operator produces, the operator places it in an array. Even if there is zero or one object.
The syntax of the array operator is as follows:
@( ... )
You can use the array operator to create an array of zero or one object. For example:
$a = @("Hello World")
$a.Count
1
$b = @()
$b.Count
0
The array operator is useful in scripts when you are getting objects, but don't know how many to expect. For example:
$p = @(Get-Process Notepad)
For more information about the array sub-expression operator, see about_Operators.
Accessing and using array elements
Reading an array
You can refer to an array using its variable name. To display all the elements
in the array, invoke the array name. For example, $a
is an array of the
numbers 0 through 9:
$a
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
You can refer to the elements in an array using an index. Enclose the index
number in brackets. Index values start at 0
. For example, to display the
first element in the $a
array, type:
$a[0]
0
To display the third element in the $a
array, type:
$a[2]
2
You can retrieve part of the array using a range operator for the index. For example, to retrieve the second to fifth elements of the array, you would type:
$a[1..4]
1
2
3
4
Negative numbers count from the end of the array. For example, -1
refers to
the last element of the array. To display the last three elements of the array,
in index ascending order, type:
$a = 0 .. 9
$a[-3..-1]
7
8
9
If you type negative indexes in descending order, your output changes.
$a = 0 .. 9
$a[-1..-3]
9
8
7
However, be cautious when using this notation. The notation cycles from the end boundary to the beginning of the array.
$a = 0 .. 9
$a[2..-2]
2
1
0
9
8
Also, one common mistake is to assume $a[0..-2]
refers to all the elements of
the array, except for the last one. It refers to the first, last, and
second-to-last elements in the array.
You can use the plus operator (+
) to combine a ranges with a list of elements
in an array. For example, to display the elements at index positions 0, 2, and
4 through 6, type:
$a = 0 .. 9
$a[0,2+4..6]
0
2
4
5
6
Also, to list multiple ranges and individual elements you can use the plus operator. For example, to list elements zero to two, four to six, and the element at eighth positional type:
$a = 0..9
$a[+0..2+4..6+8]
0
1
2
4
5
6
8
Iterations over array elements
You can also use looping constructs, such as foreach
, for
, and while
loops, to refer to the elements in an array. For example, to use a foreach
loop to display the elements in the $a
array, type:
$a = 0..9
foreach ($element in $a) {
$element
}
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
The foreach
loop iterates through the array and returns each value in the
array until reaching the end of the array.
The for
loop is useful when you are incrementing counters while examining the
elements in an array. For example, to use a for
loop to return every other
value in an array, type:
$a = 0..9
for ($i = 0; $i -le ($a.length - 1); $i += 2) {
$a[$i]
}
0
2
4
6
8
You can use a while
loop to display the elements in an array until a defined
condition is no longer true. For example, to display the elements in the $a
array while the array index is less than 4, type:
$a = 0..9
$i=0
while($i -lt 4) {
$a[$i]
$i++
}
0
1
2
3
Properties of arrays
Count or Length or LongLength
To determine how many items are in an array, use the Length property or its Count alias. Longlength is useful if the array contains more than 2,147,483,647 elements.
$a = 0..9
$a.Count
$a.Length
10
10
Rank
Returns the number of dimensions in the array. Most arrays in PowerShell have one dimension, only. Even when you think you are building a multidimensional array like the following example:
$a = @(
@(0,1),
@("b", "c"),
@(Get-Process)
)
"`$a rank: $($a.Rank)"
"`$a length: $($a.Length)"
"`$a[2] length: $($a[2].Length)"
"Process `$a[2][1]: $($a[2][1].ProcessName)"
In this example, you are creating a single-dimensional array that contains
other arrays. This is also known as a jagged array. The Rank property
proved that this is single-dimensional. To access items in a jagged array, the
indexes must be in separate brackets ([]
).
$a rank: 1
$a length: 3
$a[2] length: 348
Process $a[2][1]: AcroRd32
Multidimensional arrays are stored in row-major order. The following example shows how to create a truly multidimensional array.
[string[,]]$rank2 = [string[,]]::New(3,2)
$rank2.rank
$rank2.Length
$rank2[0,0] = 'a'
$rank2[0,1] = 'b'
$rank2[1,0] = 'c'
$rank2[1,1] = 'd'
$rank2[2,0] = 'e'
$rank2[2,1] = 'f'
$rank2[1,1]
2
6
d
To access items in a multidimensional array, separate the indexes using a comma
(,
) within a single set of brackets ([]
).
Some operations on a multidimensional array, such as replication and concatenation, require that array to be flattened. Flattening turns the array into a 1-dimensional array of unconstrained type. The resulting array takes on all the elements in row-major order. Consider the following example:
$a = "red",$true
$b = (New-Object 'int[,]' 2,2)
$b[0,0] = 10
$b[0,1] = 20
$b[1,0] = 30
$b[1,1] = 40
$c = $a + $b
$a.GetType().Name
$b.GetType().Name
$c.GetType().Name
$c
The output shows that $c
is a 1-dimensional array containing the items from
$a
and $b
in row-major order.
Object[]
Int32[,]
Object[]
red
True
10
20
30
40
Methods of arrays
Clear
Sets all element values to the default value of the array's element type. The
Clear()
method doesn't reset the size of the array.
In the following example $a
is an array of objects.
$a = 1, 2, 3
$a.Clear()
$a | % { $null -eq $_ }
True
True
True
In this example, $intA
is explicitly typed to contain integers.
[int[]] $intA = 1, 2, 3
$intA.Clear()
$intA
0
0
0
ForEach()
Allows to iterate over all elements in the array and perform a given operation for each element of the array.
The ForEach()
method has several overloads that perform different operations.
ForEach(scriptblock expression)
ForEach(scriptblock expression, object[] arguments)
ForEach(type convertToType)
ForEach(string propertyName)
ForEach(string propertyName, object[] newValue)
ForEach(string methodName)
ForEach(string methodName, object[] arguments)
ForEach(scriptblock expression)
ForEach(scriptblock expression, object[] arguments)
This method was added in PowerShell v4.
Note
The syntax requires the usage of a script block. Parentheses are optional if the scriptblock is the only parameter. Also, there must not be a space between the method and the opening parenthesis or brace.
The following example shows how use the ForEach()
method. In this case the
intent is to generate the square value of the elements in the array.
$a = @(0 .. 3)
$a.ForEach({ $_ * $_})
0
1
4
9
Just like the ArgumentList parameter of ForEach-Object
, the arguments
parameter allows the passing of an array of arguments to a script block
configured to accept them.
For more information about the behavior of ArgumentList, see about_Splatting.
ForEach(type convertToType)
The ForEach()
method can be used to cast the elements to a different type;
the following example shows how to convert a list of string dates to
[DateTime]
type.
("1/1/2017", "2/1/2017", "3/1/2017").ForEach([datetime])
Sunday, January 1, 2017 12:00:00 AM
Wednesday, February 1, 2017 12:00:00 AM
Wednesday, March 1, 2017 12:00:00 AM
ForEach(string propertyName)
ForEach(string propertyName, object[] newValue)
The ForEach()
method can also be used to retrieve, or set property values for
every item in the collection.
# Set all LastAccessTime properties of files to the current date.
(dir 'C:\Temp').ForEach('LastAccessTime', (Get-Date))
# View the newly set LastAccessTime of all items, and find Unique entries.
(dir 'C:\Temp').ForEach('LastAccessTime') | Get-Unique
Wednesday, June 20, 2018 9:21:57 AM
ForEach(string methodName)
ForEach(string methodName, object[] arguments)
Lastly, ForEach()
methods can be used to execute a method on every item in
the collection.
("one", "two", "three").ForEach("ToUpper")
ONE
TWO
THREE
Just like the ArgumentList parameter of ForEach-Object
, the arguments
parameter allows the passing of an array of values to a script block configured
to accept them.
Note
Starting in Windows PowerShell 3.0 retrieving properties and executing methods for each item in a collection can also be accomplished using "Methods of scalar objects and collections". You can read more about that here about_Methods.
Where()
Allows to filter or select the elements of the array. The script must evaluate
to anything different than: zero (0), empty string, $false
or $null
for the
element to show after the Where()
. For more information about boolean
evaluation, see about_Booleans.
There is one definition for the Where()
method.
Where(scriptblock expression[, WhereOperatorSelectionMode mode
[, int numberToReturn]])
Note
The syntax requires the usage of a script block. Parentheses are optional if the scriptblock is the only parameter. Also, there must not be a space between the method and the opening parenthesis or brace.
The Expression
is a scriptblock that's required for filtering, the mode
optional argument allows additional selection capabilities, and the
numberToReturn
optional argument allows the ability to limit how many items
are returned from the filter.
The value of mode
must be a WhereOperatorSelectionMode enum value:
Default
(0
) - Return all itemsFirst
(1
) - Return the first itemLast
(2
) - Return the last itemSkipUntil
(3
) - Skip items until condition is true, return all the remaining items (including the first item for which the condition is true)Until
(4
) - Return all items until condition is trueSplit
(5
) - Return an array of two elements- The first element contains matching items
- The second element contains the remaining items
The following example shows how to select all odd numbers from the array.
(0..9).Where{ $_ % 2 }
1
3
5
7
9
The next example shows how to select all non-empty strings.
('hi', '', 'there').Where{ $_ }
hi
there
Default
The Default
mode filters items using the Expression
scriptblock.
If a numberToReturn
is provided, it specifies the maximum number of items
to return.
# Get the zip files in the current users profile, sorted by LastAccessTime
$Zips = dir $env:userprofile -Recurse '*.zip' | Sort-Object LastAccessTime
# Get the least accessed file over 100MB
$Zips.Where({$_.Length -gt 100MB}, 'Default', 1)
Note
Both the Default
mode and First
mode return the first
(numberToReturn
) items, and can be used interchangeably.
Last
$h = (Get-Date).AddHours(-1)
$logs = dir 'C:\' -Recurse '*.log' | Sort-Object CreationTime
# Find the last 5 log files created in the past hour
$logs.Where({$_.CreationTime -gt $h}, 'Last', 5)
SkipUntil
The SkipUntil
mode skips all objects in a collection until an object passes
the script block expression filter. It then returns ALL remaining
collection items without testing them. Only one passing item is tested.
This means the returned collection contains both passing and non-passing items that have NOT been tested.
The number of items returned can be limited by passing a value to the
numberToReturn
argument.
$computers = "Server01", "Server02", "Server03", "localhost", "Server04"
# Find the first available online server.
$computers.Where({ Test-Connection $_ }, 'SkipUntil', 1)
localhost
Until
The Until
mode inverts the SkipUntil
mode. It returns ALL items in a
collection until an item passes the script block expression. Once an item
passes the scriptblock expression, the Where()
method stops processing
items.
This means that you receive the first set of non-passing items from the
Where()
method. After one item passes, the rest are NOT tested or
returned.
The number of items returned can be limited by passing a value to the
numberToReturn
argument.
# Retrieve the first set of numbers less than or equal to 10.
(1..50).Where({$_ -gt 10}, 'Until')
# This would perform the same operation.
(1..50).Where({$_ -le 10})
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Note
Both Until
and SkipUntil
operate under the premise of NOT testing a batch
of items.
Until
returns the items BEFORE the first PASS. SkipUntil
returns
all items AFTER the first pass, including the first passing item.
Split
The Split
mode splits, or groups collection items into two separate
collections. Those that pass the scriptblock expression, and those that do not.
If a numberToReturn
is specified, the first collection, contains the
passing items, not to exceed the value specified.
The remaining objects, even those that PASS the expression filter, are returned in the second collection.
$running, $stopped = (Get-Service).Where({$_.Status -eq 'Running'}, 'Split')
$running
Status Name DisplayName
------ ---- -----------
Running Appinfo Application Information
Running AudioEndpointBu... Windows Audio Endpoint Builder
Running Audiosrv Windows Audio
...
$stopped
Status Name DisplayName
------ ---- -----------
Stopped AJRouter AllJoyn Router Service
Stopped ALG Application Layer Gateway Service
Stopped AppIDSvc Application Identity
...
Note
Both ForEach()
and Where()
methods are intrinsic members. For more
information about intrinsic members, see about_Intrinsic_Members.
Get the members of an array
To get the properties and methods of an array, such as the Length property
and the SetValue method, use the InputObject parameter of the
Get-Member
cmdlet.
When you pipe an array to Get-Member
, PowerShell sends the items one at a
time and Get-Member
returns the type of each item in the array (ignoring
duplicates).
When you use the InputObject parameter, Get-Member
returns the members of
the array.
For example, the following command gets the members of the $a
array variable.
Get-Member -InputObject $a
You can also get the members of an array by typing a comma (,
) before the
value that's piped to the Get-Member
cmdlet. The comma makes the array the
second item in an array of arrays. PowerShell pipes the arrays one at a time
and Get-Member
returns the members of the array. Like the next two examples.
,$a | Get-Member
,(1,2,3) | Get-Member
Manipulating an array
You can change the elements in an array, add an element to an array, and combine the values from two arrays into a third array.
To change the value of a particular element in an array, specify the array name
and the index of the element that you want to change, and then use the
assignment operator (=
) to specify a new value for the element. For example,
to change the value of the second item in the $a
array (index position 1) to
10, type:
$a[1] = 10
You can also use the SetValue method of an array to change a value. The
following example changes the second value (index position 1) of the $a
array
to 500:
$a.SetValue(500,1)
You can use the +=
operator to add an element to an array. The following
example shows how to add an element to the $a
array.
$a = @(0..4)
$a += 5
Note
When you use the +=
operator, PowerShell actually creates a new array with
the values of the original array and the added value. This might cause
performance issues if the operation is repeated several times or the size of
the array is too big.
It isn't easy to delete elements from an array, but you can create a new array
that contains only selected elements of an existing array. For example, to
create the $t
array with all the elements in the $a
array except for the
value at index position 2, type:
$t = $a[0,1 + 3..($a.length - 1)]
To combine two arrays into a single array, use the plus operator (+
). The
following example creates two arrays, combines them, and then displays the
resulting combined array.
$x = 1,3
$y = 5,9
$z = $x + $y
As a result, the $z
array contains 1, 3, 5, and 9.
To delete an array, assign a value of $null
to the array. The following
command deletes the array in the $a
variable.
$a = $null
You can also use the Remove-Item
cmdlet, but assigning a value of $null
is
faster, especially for large arrays.
Arrays of zero or one
Beginning in Windows PowerShell 3.0, a collection of zero or one object has the Count and Length properties. Also, you can index into an array of one object. This feature helps you to avoid scripting errors that occur when a command that expects a collection gets fewer than two items.
Note
In Windows PowerShell, objects created by casting a Hashtable to
[pscustomobject]
do not have the Length or Count properties.
Attempting to access these members returns $null
.
The following example shows that a variable that contains no objects has a Count and Length of 0.
PS> $a = $null
PS> $a.Count
0
PS> $a.Length
0
The following example shows that a variable that contains one object has a Count and Length of 1. You can also use array indexing to access the value of the object.
PS> $a = 4
PS> $a.Count
1
PS> $a.Length
1
PS> $a[0]
4
PS> $a[-1]
4
When you run a command that could return a collection or a single object, you can use array indexing to access the value of the object without having to test the Count or Length properties. However, if the result is a single object (singleton), and that object has a Count or Length property, the value of those properties belong to the singleton object and don't represent the number of items in the collection.
In the following example, the command returns a single string object. The
Length of that string is 4
.
PS> $result = 'one','two','three','four' | Where-Object {$_ -like 'f*'}
PS> $result.GetType().FullName
System.String
PS> $result
four
PS> $result.Count
1
PS❯ $result.Length
4
If you want $result
to be an array of strings, you need to declare the
variable as an array.
In this example, $result
is an array of strings. The Count and Length
of the array is 1
, and the Length of the first element is 4
.
PS> [string[]]$result = 'one','two','three','four' |
Where-Object {$_ -like 'f*'}
PS> $result.GetType().FullName
System.String[]
PS> $result
four
PS> $result.Count
1
PS> $result.Length
1
PS> $result[0].Length
4
Indexing .NET types that implement IDictionary<TKey, TValue>
PowerShell doesn't call a type's true indexer for types that implement the
generic IDictionary<TKey, TValue>
interface. Instead, when given a key,
PowerShell tests for the existence of the key using TryGetValue()
, which
returns $null
when the key doesn't exist.
By contrast, if you call the type's true indexer using Item(<key>)
, the
method throws an exception when the key doesn't exist.
The following example illustrates the difference.
PS> [Collections.Generic.Dictionary[string, int]]::new()['nosuchkey']
# No output ($null)
PS> [Collections.Generic.Dictionary[string, int]]::new().Item('nosuchkey')
Exception getting "Item": "The given key 'nosuchkey' was not present in the dictionary."
At line:1 char:1
+ [Collections.Generic.Dictionary[string, int]]::new().Item('nosuchkey' ...
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : NotSpecified: (:) [], GetValueInvocationException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : ExceptionWhenGetting
Member-access enumeration
Starting in PowerShell 3.0, when you use the member-access operator to access a member that doesn't exist on a list collection, PowerShell automatically enumerates the items in the collection and attempts to access the specified member on each item. For more information, see about_Member-Access_Enumeration.
Examples
The following example creates two new files and stores the resulting objects in
the array variable $files
. Since the array object doesn't have the
LastWriteTime member, the value of LastWriteTime is returned for each
item in the array.
$files = (New-Item -Type File -Force '/temp/t1.txt'),
(New-Item -Force -Type File '/temp/t2.txt')
$files.LastWriteTime
Friday, June 25, 2021 1:21:17 PM
Friday, June 25, 2021 1:21:17 PM
Member-access enumeration enables you to get values from items in a collection, but not to set values on items in a collection. For example:
$files.LastWriteTime = (Get-Date).AddDays(-1)
The property 'LastWriteTime' cannot be found on this object. Verify that the
property exists and can be set.
At line:1 char:1
+ $files.LastWriteTime = (Get-Date).AddDays(-1)
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : InvalidOperation: (:) [], RuntimeException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : PropertyAssignmentException
To set the values you must use a method.
$files.set_LastWriteTime((Get-Date).AddDays(-1))
$files.LastWriteTime
Thursday, June 24, 2021 1:23:30 PM
Thursday, June 24, 2021 1:23:30 PM
The set_LastWriteTime()
method is a hidden member of the FileInfo
object. The following example shows how to find hidden set
methods.
$files | Get-Member -Force -Name set_*
TypeName: System.IO.FileInfo
Name MemberType Definition
---- ---------- ----------
Attributes Property System.IO.FileAttributes Attributes {get;set;}
CreationTime Property datetime CreationTime {get;set;}
CreationTimeUtc Property datetime CreationTimeUtc {get;set;}
IsReadOnly Property bool IsReadOnly {get;set;}
LastAccessTime Property datetime LastAccessTime {get;set;}
LastAccessTimeUtc Property datetime LastAccessTimeUtc {get;set;}
LastWriteTime Property datetime LastWriteTime {get;set;}
LastWriteTimeUtc Property datetime LastWriteTimeUtc {get;set;}
Caution
Since the method is executed for each item in the collection, care should be taken when calling methods using member enumeration.
See also
PowerShell