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| author | Charliecoolblue <89911250+Charliecoolblue@users.noreply.github.com> | 2022-10-04 17:15:08 +0200 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2022-10-04 17:15:08 +0200 | 
| commit | b5ab0b79282ff1ddf8b5f60e45a7326c84c9b5dd (patch) | |
| tree | 87548c70c860d1b29c4a5954a2c27a59d0c393a8 /powershell.html.markdown | |
| parent | a52f5d2c26572e8f61c514d4c9a76c9d998f3f69 (diff) | |
[powershell/en] correct examples for arrays
Fixed incorrect examples for arrays.
Added information for tuple
Fixed wording for Hashtables
Diffstat (limited to 'powershell.html.markdown')
| -rw-r--r-- | powershell.html.markdown | 53 | 
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 28 deletions
| diff --git a/powershell.html.markdown b/powershell.html.markdown index 033d6c25..5d21ef67 100644 --- a/powershell.html.markdown +++ b/powershell.html.markdown @@ -221,7 +221,7 @@ $defaultArray.Add("thing4") # => Exception "Collection was of a fixed size."  # ArrayLists store sequences  [System.Collections.ArrayList]$array = @()  # You can start with a prefilled ArrayList -[System.Collections.ArrayList]$otherArray = @(4, 5, 6) +[System.Collections.ArrayList]$otherArray = @(5, 6, 7, 8)  # Add to the end of a list with 'Add' (Note: produces output, append to $null)  $array.Add(1) > $null    # $array is now [1] @@ -237,25 +237,14 @@ $array.Add(3) > $null   # array is now [1, 2, 4, 3] again.  $array[0]   # => 1  # Look at the last element  $array[-1]  # => 3 -  # Looking out of bounds returns nothing  $array[4]  # blank line returned -# You can look at ranges with slice syntax. -# The start index is included, the end index is not -# (It's a closed/open range for you mathy types.) -$array[1..3]   # Return array from index 1 to 3 => [2, 4] -$array[2..-1]    # Return array starting from index 2 => [4, 3] -$array[0..3]    # Return array from beginning until index 3  => [1, 2, 4] -$array[0..2]   # Return array selecting every second entry => [1, 4] -$array.Reverse()  # mutates array to reverse order => [3, 4, 2, 1] -# Use any combination of these to make advanced slices - -# Remove arbitrary elements from a array with "del" -$array.Remove($array[2])  # $array is now [1, 2, 3] +# Remove elements from a array +$array.Remove($array[3])  # $array is now [1, 2, 4] -# Insert an element at a specific index -$array.Insert(1, 2)  # $array is now [1, 2, 3] again +# Insert at index an element  +$array.Insert(2, 3)  # $array is now [1, 2, 3, 4]  # Get the index of the first item found matching the argument  $array.IndexOf(2)  # => 1 @@ -263,16 +252,24 @@ $array.IndexOf(6)  # Returns -1 as "outside array"  # You can add arrays  # Note: values for $array and for $otherArray are not modified. -$array + $otherArray  # => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] +$array + $otherArray  # => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]  # Concatenate arrays with "AddRange()" -$array.AddRange($otherArray)  # Now $array is [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] +$array.AddRange($otherArray)  # Now $array is [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]  # Check for existence in a array with "in"  1 -in $array  # => True  # Examine length with "Count" (Note: "Length" on arrayList = each items length) -$array.Count  # => 6 +$array.Count  # => 8 + +# You can look at ranges with slice syntax. +$array[1,3,5]     # Return selected index  => [2, 4, 6] +$array[1..3]      # Return from index 1 to 3 => [2, 3, 4] +$array[-3..-1]    # Return from last 3 to last 1 => [6, 7, 8] +$array[-1..-3]    # Return from last 1 to last 3 => [8, 7, 6] +$array[2..-1]     # Return from index 2 to last (NOT as most expect) => [3, 2, 1, 8] +$array[0,2+4..6]  # Return multiple ranges with the + => [1, 3, 5, 6, 7]  # Tuples are like arrays but are immutable. @@ -284,13 +281,14 @@ $tuple.Item(0) = 3  # Raises a TypeError  # You can do some of the array methods on tuples, but they are limited.  $tuple.Length       # => 3  $tuple + (4, 5, 6)  # => Exception -$tuple[0..2]        # => $null +$tuple[0..2]        # => $null (in powershell 5)    => [1, 2, 3] (in powershell 7)  2 -in $tuple        # => False -# Hashtables store mappings from keys to values, similar to Dictionaries. +# Hashtables store mappings from keys to values, similar to (but distinct from) Dictionaries. +# Hashtables do not hold entry order as arrays do.   $emptyHash = @{} -# Here is a prefilled dictionary +# Here is a prefilled hashtable  $filledHash = @{"one"= 1                   "two"= 2                   "three"= 3} @@ -299,7 +297,6 @@ $filledHash = @{"one"= 1  $filledHash["one"]  # => 1  # Get all keys as an iterable with ".Keys". -# items maintain the order at which they are inserted into the dictionary.  $filledHash.Keys  # => ["one", "two", "three"]  # Get all values as an iterable with ".Values". @@ -307,18 +304,18 @@ $filledHash.Values  # => [1, 2, 3]  # Check for existence of keys or values in a hash with "-in"  "one" -in $filledHash.Keys  # => True -1 -in $filledHash.Values    # => False +1 -in $filledHash.Values    # => False (in powershell 5)    => True (in powershell 7)  # Looking up a non-existing key returns $null  $filledHash["four"]  # $null -# Adding to a dictionary +# Adding to a hashtable  $filledHash.Add("five",5)  # $filledHash["five"] is set to 5  $filledHash.Add("five",6)  # exception "Item with key "five" has already been added" -$filledHash["four"] = 4 # $filledHash["four"] is set to 4, running again does nothing +$filledHash["four"] = 4    # $filledHash["four"] is set to 4, running again does nothing -# Remove keys from a dictionary with del -$filledHash.Remove("one") # Removes the key "one" from filled dict +# Remove keys from a hashtable +$filledHash.Remove("one") # Removes the key "one" from filled hashtable  #################################################### | 
