Difference between revisions of "Useful PowerShell Commands"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
<p>You can start with an excel file. Header has to be <span class="high"> Path</span> and <span class="high">NewName </span></p> | <p>You can start with an excel file. Header has to be <span class="high"> Path</span> and <span class="high">NewName </span></p> | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:auto" | {| class="wikitable" style="margin:auto" | ||
|+ | |+ Sample Excel File, You can add the full path to the filename as needed | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Path !! NewName | ! Path !! NewName |
Revision as of 17:40, 18 October 2024
Get-ComputerInfo
Accessing the properties of a command
Get-Computerinfo -Properties csusername Get-Computerinfo -Properties csusername | Get-Member Get-ComputerInfo | Format-List OsType,osName,csusername
Write output to the screen, like Echo
Write-Output "Hello World"
Read Text file
Get-Content filename.txt
Rename-Computer Restart-Computer Get-Date Get-TimeZone
Update Windows From PowerShell
Import csv file The pipe it to another function
import-csv .\filename.csv |
Rename Files using csv list / excel file (exported to CSV)
If you execute the script in the same directory as the files, you don't have to add the full path, but if it's in a different directory the the full path is needed
You can start with an excel file. Header has to be Path and NewName
Path | NewName |
---|---|
cat.jpg | cat01.jpg |
dog.jpg | dog02.jpg |
rat.jpg | rat03.jpg |
Path refers to the Old Filename and NewName is the New Filename
The reason why we add the Path, and NewName is because the Rename-Item function accepts a Path string and a NewName string
import-csv ./rename.csv | rename-item
The CSV File
Path,NewName dog.jpg,222-dog.jpg rat.jpg,333-rat.jpg cat.jpg,111-cat.jpg