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Mastering Windows PowerShell Scripting (Second Edition) - Second Edition

You're reading from  Mastering Windows PowerShell Scripting (Second Edition) - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787126305
Pages 440 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
 Brenton J.W. Blawat Brenton J.W. Blawat
Profile icon Brenton J.W. Blawat

Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. Introduction to PowerShell 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

Comparison operators


PowerShell has a wide variety of comparison operators:

  • Equal to and not equal to: -eq and -ne
  • Like and not like: -like and -notlike
  • Greater than and greater than or equal to: -gt and -ge
  • Less than and less than or equal to: -lt and -le
  • Contains and not contains: -contains and -notcontains
  • In and not in: -in and -notin

Case-sensitivity

None of the comparison operators are case sensitive by default. Each of the comparison operators has two additional variants, one which explicitly states it is case-sensitive, and another which explicitly states it is case-insensitive.

For example, the following statement returns true:

'Trees' -eq 'trees' 

Adding a c modifier in front of the operator name forces PowerShell to make a case-sensitive comparison. The following statement will return false:

'Trees' -ceq 'trees' 

In addition to this the case-sensitive modifier, PowerShell also has an explicit case-insensitive modifier:

'Trees' -ieq 'trees' 

However, as case insensitive comparison is the default...

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