A little background:

I use PowerShell on windows xp at work and I set a bunch of useful shortcuts in Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1 in My Documents, trying to emulate Mac environment inspired by Ryan Bates's shortcuts

I have things like:

Set-Alias rsc Rails-Console
function Rails-Console {Invoke-Expression "ruby script/console"}

Which works just fine when in command prompt I say:

rsc #it calls the proper command

However this doesn't work properly

Set-Alias rsg Rails-Generate
function Rails-Generate {Invoke-Expression "ruby script/generate"}

So when I do :

rsg model User

which is supposed to call

ruby script/generate model User

all it calls is

ruby script/generate  #Dumping  my params

So how would I properly modify my functions to take params I send to functions?

Thank you!!

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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Your function doesn't take any arguments so it's not terribly surprising that none get passed.

You should write it like so:

function Rails-Generate { ruby script/generate $args }

Note that Invoke-Expression is unnecessary here. PowerShell is a shell—it has no problem calling other programs directly.

Demo:

PS Home:\> Set-Alias foo Call-Foo
PS Home:\> function Call-Foo { args }
PS Home:\> foo bar baz
argv[0] = Somewhere\args.exe

PS Home:\> function Call-Foo { args $args }
PS Home:\> foo bar baz
argv[0] = Somewhere\args.exe
argv[1] = bar
argv[2] = baz
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Johannes - Thank you ! I'm new to powershell - so I wasn't sure how to pass args, it doesn't work the same as bash.. Thank you! – Nick Gorbikoff Apr 20 '10 at 19:00
He would have to consider Invoke-Expression or other means to avoid arguments that use some special characters. Things like : or -- can start to mess up powershell parsing your full commandline. – James Pogran Apr 21 '10 at 16:45
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