3

Viz. ABC.ps1 has this

param(
[bool]$A= $False,
[bool]$B= $False,
[bool]$C= $False
)

$count=$Args.Count
Write-Host "$count"

If I call it as: .\ABC.ps1 $True $True $True It should display 3.

This is just a guess, but $Args.Count is always zero, possibly because it Args doesn't hold/count named arguments.

3 Answers 3

7

The number of named parameters can be gotten from $psboundparameters

&{param(
[bool]$A= $False,
[bool]$B= $False,
[bool]$C= $False
)
$psboundparameters | ft auto
$psboundparameters.count
} $true $true $true

Key Value
--- -----
A    True
B    True
C    True


3

$arg will indeed contain only the unbound parameters.

1
  • $psboundparameters.count is the thing I was looking for. Thanks.
    – dushyantp
    Mar 22, 2012 at 12:20
2

Named Param are bind in $psboundparameters.count any other additional arguments are bind in $args.count the total arguments passed is ($psboundparameters.count + $args.count).

Test it:

param(
[bool]$A,
[bool]$B,
[bool]$C
)

$count=$Args.Count
Write-Host "$a - $b - $c - $($args[0]) - $count"

$psboundparameters.count

$args.count

call it .\abc.ps1 $true $true $true $false

1
  • $psboundparameters.count is the thing I was looking for. Thanks.
    – dushyantp
    Mar 22, 2012 at 12:20
2

$args will hold the count of values that exceeds the named parameters count (unbound parameters). If you have three named parameters and you send five arguments, $args.count will output 2.

Keep in mind that if the CmdletBinding attribute is present, no remaining arguments are allowed and you'll get an error:

function test
{
    [cmdletbinding()]
    param($a,$b,$c)
    $a,$b,$c    
}

test a b c d

test: A positional parameter cannot be found that accepts argument 'd'.

To allow remaining arguments you will have use the ValueFromRemainingArguments parameter attribute. Now all unbound arguments will accumulate in $c:

function test
{
    [cmdletbinding()]
    param($a,$b,[Parameter(ValueFromRemainingArguments=$true)]$c)
    "`$a=$a"
    "`$b=$b"
    "`$c=$c"    
}

test a b c d

$a=a
$b=b
$c=c d

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.