4

I am using powershell 5. I created an enum in different ps1 file and I like to load it in another ps1 that has CmdletBinding.

I tried the code below but didn't work. Is there any way to load the enum ps1 before the CmdletBinding?

. ".\GeneratorType.ps1" 

[CmdletBinding()]
Param
(
        [Parameter(ValueFromPipeline=$True,ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName = $True,Mandatory=$False)]       
        [GeneratorType]$type = [GeneratorType]::All
)
5
  • Tricky. Works with a function, but not without. It seems [CmdletBinding()] has to come first ...
    – sodawillow
    Nov 22, 2015 at 7:44
  • 1
    Yes. I noticed that too. If I don't use that enum in parameter, I can load it after CmdletBinding but I like to use the enum in one of my parameters. The only solution that I found is to define that enum type in same file. I don't want to put CmdletBinding inside the function too. Nov 22, 2015 at 7:48
  • 1
    You can always dot-source the class script outside of the cmdlet script, before calling it, like a wrapper script :-) or build the class in your profile
    – sodawillow
    Nov 22, 2015 at 7:51
  • Thanks @sodawillow and @ Mathias R. Jessen .. I will look at that module. but I thought its gonna be overkill for my simple script github.com/michaelsync/powershell-scripts/tree/master/… ... If using the module is the only way then I will just declare that enum in the same file. Nov 22, 2015 at 23:43
  • @MichaelSync How do you define your enum in the same file? It still has to be defined after CmdletBinding, thus still being unknown in the parameter block. Can you post an answer on how you solved the problem? Mar 23, 2022 at 8:45

1 Answer 1

4

Think of it like this: A PowerShell script is a self-contained ScriptBlock.

The [CmdletBinding()] attribute is part of the param-block. According to the language specification, a param-block must be the first part of the ScriptBlock if present.

So no, you cannot put anything before the CmdletBinding attribute.

What you can do, is to convert your GeneratorTypes.ps1 script to a module and use

#Requires -Modules

to make sure it's loaded when the param block is interpreted.

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