953

Suppose I have the following snippet:

$assoc = New-Object PSObject -Property @{
    Id = 42
    Name = "Slim Shady"
    Owner = "Eminem"
}

Write-Host $assoc.Id + "  -  "  + $assoc.Name + "  -  " + $assoc.Owner

I'd expect this snippet to show:

42 - Slim Shady - Eminem

But instead it shows:

42 + - + Slim Shady + - + Eminem

Which makes me think the + operator isn't appropriate for concatenating strings and variables.

How should you approach this with PowerShell?

2
  • 52
    Your code works if all elements are strings and you enclose the expression in parentheses: Write-host ($assoc.Id.ToString() + " - " + $assoc.Name + " - " + $assoc.Owner) here $assoc.Id is an Int32 so we have to use its string representation. Otherwise PS tries to perform an arithmetic addition instead of concatenation.
    – bouvierr
    Nov 30, 2013 at 22:59
  • 8
    Given the number of views I thought it was appropriate to repair the text of this question, even though my edits changed the contents quite a bit. I've tried to keep the terminology/wording and spirit of the question intact, while improving it enough so that it may be reopened.
    – Jeroen
    Oct 22, 2014 at 11:19

22 Answers 22

1025
Write-Host "$($assoc.Id) - $($assoc.Name) - $($assoc.Owner)"

See the Windows PowerShell Language Specification Version 3.0, p25, sub-expressions expansion.

7
  • 16
    Why the $($name) vs just $name? Is this just defensive in the same way as in bash using ${name}? Feb 26, 2016 at 17:04
  • 133
    This isn't technically concatenation.
    – TravisEz13
    Jun 14, 2016 at 17:59
  • 15
    @DannyStaple the question has been edited so much that the answer doesn't make sense anymore. In the slim shady example, yes "... $name ..." will work all the same, but in the original question for which this answer addresses, the question is how to access object properties. so if $name.id -eq 42 then "... $name.id ..." would not work like you want because it would render like ... @{id=42}.id ... instead of the desired ... 42 ... For that, use the answer's method "... $($name.id) ...". I'm bookmarking question to edit later. Jun 17, 2016 at 3:20
  • 4
    This doesn't work for distributing strings across multiple lines. Instead use ( $string1, $string2, $string3 ) -join "" or ($string1 + $string2 + $string3). With these methods, you can have whitespace (spaces, tabs, and newlines) between the strings, but be sure that (1) each string has a comma/space after it on the same line, (2) you use the back-tick character ` at the end of any empty lines between your code, and (3) if you use -join, the end bracket and the -join operator must be on the same line
    – Dave F
    Dec 27, 2018 at 1:18
  • 2
    you sure it's on page 34? Literal page or page no in the down-right corner? I checked both places and didn't find it...
    – Jing He
    Jul 18, 2019 at 14:45
387

There is a difference between single and double quotes. (I am using PowerShell 4).

You can do this (as Benjamin said):

$name = 'Slim Shady'
Write-Host 'My name is'$name
-> My name is Slim Shady

Or you can do this:

$name = 'Slim Shady'
Write-Host "My name is $name"
-> My name is Slim Shady

The single quotes are for literal, output the string exactly like this, please. The double quotes are for when you want some pre-processing done (such as variables, special characters, etc.)

So:

$name = "Marshall Bruce Mathers III"
Write-Host "$name"
-> Marshall Bruce Mathers III

Whereas:

$name = "Marshall Bruce Mathers III"
Write-Host '$name'
-> $name

(I find How-to: Escape characters, Delimiters and Quotes good for reference).

4
  • 3
    Works with 1.0 too. Jun 18, 2016 at 11:06
  • 1
    This quote rule and demo for concatenation is applicable to 'nix shell scripting (e.g. Bash), in addition to PowerShell. The portability factor alone earns my vote.
    – BuvinJ
    Nov 20, 2020 at 14:28
  • 1
    powershell is neat and will put a space between the string and the content of the variable in Write-Host 'My name is'$name
    – Timo
    Oct 28, 2021 at 8:36
  • 1
    @Santropedro Try it online!
    – Timo
    Mar 31 at 20:46
275

You can also use -join

E.g.

$var = -join("Hello", " ", "world");

Would assign "Hello world" to $var.

So to output, in one line:

Write-Host (-join("Hello", " ", "world"))
6
  • 10
    at least this one could be used in foreach
    – dEmigOd
    Jun 9, 2020 at 7:51
  • 4
    Please add that if you are using commands as inputs, wrap the command inside $().....eg... -join($(cmd1), ",", $(cmd2)) ...took me too long to figure out as I am new to powershell
    – S. Melted
    Sep 11, 2020 at 15:49
  • 1
    @S.Melted why wrap inside $()? Nov 17, 2020 at 23:19
  • Upon further review, only () is necessary for my need. For example: -join("Timestamp: ", Get-Date) gives an error, while -join("Timestamp: ", (Get-Date)) runs fine. However, this explains when $() would be necessary.
    – S. Melted
    Dec 23, 2020 at 19:20
  • Write-Host -join("Hello", " ", "world") will not join as the whole join argument needs brackets including the name of the arg = join.
    – Timo
    Oct 28, 2021 at 8:39
156

One way is:

Write-Host "$($assoc.Id)  -  $($assoc.Name)  -  $($assoc.Owner)"

Another one is:

Write-Host  ("{0}  -  {1}  -  {2}" -f $assoc.Id,$assoc.Name,$assoc.Owner )

Or just (but I don't like it ;) ):

Write-Host $assoc.Id  "  -  "   $assoc.Name  "  -  "  $assoc.Owner
3
  • 10
    I don't think that last one works exactly as you'd expect. See pastebin here. Powershell will add one (even though you have two here) space to the output for the whitespace between $assoc.Id and " (et al). That is, option 1 gives you Id__-__Name__-__Owner (two spaces on each side of each -), but option 3 gives Id___-___Name___-___Owner (three spaces).
    – ruffin
    Dec 17, 2014 at 15:10
  • 5
    Perhaps a more useful pastebin. $assoc.Id"###"$assoc.Name will add spaces to either side of the ###, where "$($assoc.Id)###$($assoc.Name)" won't.
    – ruffin
    Dec 17, 2014 at 15:20
  • I like having placeholders in the string for the variables, like in your middle example. It's handy when you want to have characters adjacent to the variable content, for example Write-Host ("Execution took {1}h, {2}m, {3}s to complete" -f $timeSpan.Hours, $timeSpan.Minutes, $timeSpan.Seconds) Jan 25 at 14:27
97

Try wrapping whatever you want to print out in parentheses:

Write-Host ($assoc.Id + "  -  "  + $assoc.Name + "  -  " + $assoc.Owner)

Your code is being interpreted as many parameters being passed to Write-Host. Wrapping it up inside parentheses will concatenate the values and then pass the resulting value as a single parameter.

5
  • 4
    +1, I prefer this format when using other methods like Write-Debug or Write-Verbose for including double quotes and variable values, such as Write-Debug ('Running "cmdlet" with parameter $MyVar = ' + $MyVar + " at time " + (Get-Date -DisplayHint Time))
    – IT Bear
    Jan 9, 2017 at 18:25
  • 2
    Yes, this is string concatenation. It does not add newlines or extra spaces. It lets you use either single or double-quoted strings.
    – LexH
    Oct 24, 2018 at 21:28
  • 3
    This trick is true concatenation and allows you to do multi-line strings, like you would in .net. Very good for doing multiline SQL statements! Why doesn't powershell do this by default!?
    – Brain2000
    Dec 12, 2018 at 5:26
  • Thanks a bunch for this! I was having a hard time building up the URI parameter for Invoke-WebRequest and your solution was the only one that actually worked: Invoke-WebRequest -uri ('http://mysvr/guestauth/app/rest/...'+$param1+'_'+$param2+'_something,count:10')
    – Andreas
    Jun 22, 2020 at 11:42
  • I had a use case where I was already in a double-quote("") and couldn't use the "accepted" answer, because it would break my string in an upper level of the command chain. Your answer was very helpful and solved my problem. Thanks!
    – ZaxLofful
    Oct 23, 2020 at 6:49
43

Another option is:

$string = $assoc.ID
$string += " - "
$string += $assoc.Name
$string += " - "
$string += $assoc.Owner
Write-Host $string

The "best" method is probably the one C.B. suggested:

Write-Host "$($assoc.Id)  -  $($assoc.Name)  -  $($assoc.Owner)"
4
  • 3
    You need to add the StringBuilder option if you're going concat-crazy. ;^)
    – ruffin
    Dec 17, 2014 at 14:56
  • 2
    surely there is a way to pipe the desired properties into an external file, then deserialize them into a string of components joined with hyphens(?) Feb 25, 2015 at 16:43
  • It's hard to imagine an aproach worse than this. Strings are immutable, so each concatenation operation in fact produces a new string, copying characters of the original one. Mar 10, 2018 at 1:08
  • 1
    In response to Code Jockey Using += may produce a new string each time, but for a relatively small string adding additional small strings like this, who cares. The clarity of what is happening is most important and with PowerShell just getting the thing working is more important than anything else.
    – Action Dan
    Jan 24, 2021 at 20:17
43

While expression:

"string1" + "string2" + "string3"

will concatenate the string, you need to put a $ in front of the parenthesis to make it evaluate as a single argument when passed to a PowerShell command. Example:

Write-Host $( "string1" + "string2" + "string3" )

As a bonus, if you want it to span multiple lines, then you need to use the awkward backtick syntax at the end of the line (without any spaces or characters to the right of the backtick).

Example:

Write-Host $(`
    "The rain in "        +`
    "Spain falls mainly " +`
    "in the plains"       )`
    -ForegroundColor Yellow

(Actually, I think PowerShell is currently implemented a little bit wrong by requiring unnecessary backticks between parentheses. If Microsoft would just follow Python or Tcl parenthesis rules of allowing you to put as many newlines as you want between the starting and ending parenthesis then they would solve most of the problems that people don't like about PowerShell related to line continuation, and concatenation of strings.

I've found that you can leave the backticks off sometimes on line continuations between parenthesis, but it's really flaky and unpredictable if it will work... It's better to just add the backticks.)

37

You need to place the expression in parentheses to stop them being treated as different parameters to the cmdlet:

Write-Host ($assoc.Id + "  -  "  + $assoc.Name + "  -  " + $assoc.Owner)
1
  • 1
    This is compulsory for Write-Debug
    – Frank
    May 31, 2016 at 11:51
18

(Current PowerShell version 5.1.17134.407)

This also works as of now:

$myVar = "Hello"

echo "${myVar} World"

Note: this only works with double quotes

0
14

Here is another way as an alternative:

Write-Host (" {0}  -  {1}  -  {2}" -f $assoc.Id, $assoc.Name, $assoc.Owner)
10

I just want to bring another way to do this using .NET String.Format:

$name = "Slim Shady"
Write-Host ([string]::Format("My name is {0}", $name))
2
  • 3
    Is there any advantage of using .NET String.Format instead of old plain "{0}" -f $var? I don't see the point in using .NET code where plain PowerShell can do the job...
    – Dinei
    Jan 31, 2017 at 14:53
  • 4
    @DineiRockenbach Probably not. Just wanted to bring up another example. Jan 31, 2017 at 15:05
9

Concatenate strings just like in the DOS days. This is a big deal for logging so here you go:

$strDate = Get-Date
$strday = "$($strDate.Year)$($strDate.Month)$($strDate.Day)"

Write-Output "$($strDate.Year)$($strDate.Month)$($strDate.Day)"
Write-Output $strday
1
  • 1
    For dates, I think the toString option is easier: (Get-Date).toString('yyyyMMdd')
    – Tony
    Jun 10, 2020 at 21:22
8

These answers all seem very complicated. If you are using this in a PowerShell script you can simply do this:

$name = 'Slim Shady'
Write-Host 'My name is'$name

It will output

My name is Slim Shady

Note how a space is put between the words for you

0
8

I seem to struggle with this (and many other unintuitive things) every time I use PowerShell after time away from it, so I now opt for:

[string]::Concat("There are ", $count, " items in the list")
1
  • 3
    this returns System.Object, fyi.
    – Barry
    Oct 18, 2017 at 20:58
8

From What To Do / Not to Do in PowerShell: Part 1:

$id = $assoc.Id
$name = $assoc.Name
$owner = $assoc.owner
"$id - $name - $owner"
7

Personally I prefer this style:

[string]::Join(' - ', 42, 'Slim Shady', 'Eminem')

or based on any object with even different attribute types:

$assoc = [psCustomObject][ordered]@{
    Id    = 42
    Name  = 'Slim Shady'
    Owner = 'Eminem'
}
[string]::Join(' - ',$assoc.psObject.Properties.value)

which gives you this result:

42 - Slim Shady - Eminem
5

Write-Host can concatenate like this too:

Write-Host $assoc.Id" - "$assoc.Name" - "$assoc.Owner

This is the simplest way, IMHO.

4

If you're concatenating strings to build file paths, use the Join-Path command:

Join-Path C:\temp "MyNewFolder"

It'll automatically add the appropriate trailing / leading slashes for you, which makes things a lot easier.

4
$assoc = @{
    Id = 34
    FirstName = "John"
    LastName = "Doe"
    Owner = "Wife"
}

$assocId = $assoc.Id
$assocFN = $assoc.FirstName
$assocLN = $assoc.LastName
$assocName = $assocFN, $assocLN -Join " "
$assocOwner = $assoc.Owner

$assocJoin = $assocId, $assocName, $assocOwner -join " - "
$assocJoin
#Output = 34 - John Doe - Wife
3

As noted elsewhere, you can use join.

If you are using commands as inputs (as I was), use the following syntax:

-join($(Command1), "," , $(Command2))

This would result in the two outputs separated by a comma.

See https://stackoverflow.com/a/34720515/11012871 for related comment

1

Just for the fun. You can also access the values of the PSObject directly like below:

$assoc.psobject.Properties.value -join " - "

But if you do not specify that the object should be ordered, PowerShell will display the values in a random order. So you should add the flag [ordered]:

$assoc = [pscustomobject] [ordered] @{
    Id = 42
    Name = "Slim Shady"
    Owner = "Eminem"
}
0
0

You can also get access to C#/.NET methods, and the following also works:

$string1 = "Slim Shady, "
$string2 = "The real slim shady"

$concatString = [System.String]::Concat($string1, $string2)

Output:

Slim Shady, The real slim shady
0

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