Can I use the mechanism powershell uses for displaying certain columns?
When you run Get-Process
it returns:
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) CPU(s) Id SI ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ------ -- -- -----------
299 20 6148 1152 17.30 15980 1 ALMon
336 14 8708 2700 14.13 5244 0 ALsvc
408 24 22652 21644 8.97 16108 1 ApplicationFrameHost
...
- How does Powershell know which columns should be displayed and what should be their names?
- Can I use that mechanism when defining my custom objects?
powershell
add a comment |
When you run Get-Process
it returns:
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) CPU(s) Id SI ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ------ -- -- -----------
299 20 6148 1152 17.30 15980 1 ALMon
336 14 8708 2700 14.13 5244 0 ALsvc
408 24 22652 21644 8.97 16108 1 ApplicationFrameHost
...
- How does Powershell know which columns should be displayed and what should be their names?
- Can I use that mechanism when defining my custom objects?
powershell
1
poshoholic.com/2008/07/05/…
– Micha Wiedenmann
Nov 20 '18 at 9:54
add a comment |
When you run Get-Process
it returns:
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) CPU(s) Id SI ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ------ -- -- -----------
299 20 6148 1152 17.30 15980 1 ALMon
336 14 8708 2700 14.13 5244 0 ALsvc
408 24 22652 21644 8.97 16108 1 ApplicationFrameHost
...
- How does Powershell know which columns should be displayed and what should be their names?
- Can I use that mechanism when defining my custom objects?
powershell
When you run Get-Process
it returns:
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) CPU(s) Id SI ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ------ -- -- -----------
299 20 6148 1152 17.30 15980 1 ALMon
336 14 8708 2700 14.13 5244 0 ALsvc
408 24 22652 21644 8.97 16108 1 ApplicationFrameHost
...
- How does Powershell know which columns should be displayed and what should be their names?
- Can I use that mechanism when defining my custom objects?
powershell
powershell
edited Nov 20 '18 at 9:47
Micha Wiedenmann
10.4k1364104
10.4k1364104
asked Nov 20 '18 at 9:46
KubaKuba
163110
163110
1
poshoholic.com/2008/07/05/…
– Micha Wiedenmann
Nov 20 '18 at 9:54
add a comment |
1
poshoholic.com/2008/07/05/…
– Micha Wiedenmann
Nov 20 '18 at 9:54
1
1
poshoholic.com/2008/07/05/…
– Micha Wiedenmann
Nov 20 '18 at 9:54
poshoholic.com/2008/07/05/…
– Micha Wiedenmann
Nov 20 '18 at 9:54
add a comment |
1 Answer
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The Format.ps1xml files in PowerShell define the default display of objects in the PowerShell console. You can create your own Format.ps1xml files to change the display of objects or to define default displays for new object types that you create in PowerShell.
Here's how you would extend that. The content is too much to post in the answer, but you can always find this information by searching for something like: Powershell default formatting xml
add a comment |
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The Format.ps1xml files in PowerShell define the default display of objects in the PowerShell console. You can create your own Format.ps1xml files to change the display of objects or to define default displays for new object types that you create in PowerShell.
Here's how you would extend that. The content is too much to post in the answer, but you can always find this information by searching for something like: Powershell default formatting xml
add a comment |
The Format.ps1xml files in PowerShell define the default display of objects in the PowerShell console. You can create your own Format.ps1xml files to change the display of objects or to define default displays for new object types that you create in PowerShell.
Here's how you would extend that. The content is too much to post in the answer, but you can always find this information by searching for something like: Powershell default formatting xml
add a comment |
The Format.ps1xml files in PowerShell define the default display of objects in the PowerShell console. You can create your own Format.ps1xml files to change the display of objects or to define default displays for new object types that you create in PowerShell.
Here's how you would extend that. The content is too much to post in the answer, but you can always find this information by searching for something like: Powershell default formatting xml
The Format.ps1xml files in PowerShell define the default display of objects in the PowerShell console. You can create your own Format.ps1xml files to change the display of objects or to define default displays for new object types that you create in PowerShell.
Here's how you would extend that. The content is too much to post in the answer, but you can always find this information by searching for something like: Powershell default formatting xml
answered Nov 20 '18 at 9:51
4c74356b414c74356b41
28.4k42053
28.4k42053
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1
poshoholic.com/2008/07/05/…
– Micha Wiedenmann
Nov 20 '18 at 9:54