I've seen the @ symbol used in PowerShell to initialise arrays. What exactly does the @ symbol denote and where can I read more about it?
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PowerShell will actually treat any comma-separated list as an array: "server1","server2" So the @ is optional in those cases. However, for associative arrays, the @ is required: @{"Key"="Value";"Key2"="Value2"} Officially, @ is the "array operator." You can read more about it in the documentation that installed along with PowerShell, or in a book like "Windows PowerShell: TFM," which I co-authored :). | |||
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In PowerShell V2, @ is also the SPLAT operator.
Experiment! Enjoy! Engage! Jeffrey Snover [MSFT] Windows Management Partner Architect | |||||
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You can also wrap the output of a cmdlet (or pipeline) in @() to ensure that what you get back is an array rather than a single item. For instance, dir usually returns a list, but depending on the options, it might return a single object. If you are planning on iterating through the results with a foreach-object, you need to make sure you get a list back. Here's a contrived example: $results = @( dir c:\autoexec.bat) One more thing... an empty array (like to initialize a variable) is deonted @(). | |||
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The Splatting Operator To create an array, we create a variable and assign the array. Arrays are noted by the "@" symbol. Let's take the discussion above and use an array to connect to multiple remote computers: $strComputers = @("Server1", "Server2", "Server3") They are used for arrays and hashes. | ||||
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