18

In this question we resolved our issue but there was one point that I have not learned yet.

Below comments in the above post:

My goal is - To call each file data based on indexing from nested array and remove last three lines. So- $array = New-Object Sytem.Collections.Arraylist; Get-ChildItem C:\...\test | ForEach-Object { $array += ,@(Get-Content $_.FullName) }; $array[0].removerange($array[0].count-2,2) But it throws error that removerange is not recognised. I checked - $array[0] | gm and removerange method was indeed not there. Just Remove and Removeat. How to proceed for this? - iamsmith41 Jan 11 at 22:14

@iamsmith41 Get-Content returns a System.Array, not a System.Collections.ArrayList. The former doesn't have a RemoveRange() method. Also, please don't move the target. If one of the answers resolves the problem described in your current question: please consider accepting that answer. If you have a new or followup question: please post a new question. - Ansgar Wiechers Jan 11 at 23:33

Ok. I marked the answer. But just let me know how to get it done( removerange() method ). Thanks in advance. - iamsmith41 2 days ago

$array += ,[Collections.ArrayList]@(Get-Content $_.FullName) should probably suffice. If you need further help please post a new question. - Ansgar Wiechers 2 days ago


How to know the object type like above that I have to use is Collections.ArrayList and so on? How to know that this is a System.Array and not System.Collections.ArrayList, etc.?

1
  • 3
    ($expression).GetType().FullName or [Type]::GetTypeArray((,($expression)))[0].FullName. Jan 15, 2017 at 7:24

4 Answers 4

37

You can determine the type of an object via its GetType() method:

PS C:\> (Get-Item '.').GetType()

IsPublic IsSerial Name                           BaseType
-------- -------- ----                           --------
True     True     DirectoryInfo                  System.IO.FileSystemInfo

PS C:\> (Get-Item '.').GetType().FullName
System.IO.DirectoryInfo

or by using the Get-Member cmdlet:

PS C:\> Get-Item '.' | Get-Member

   TypeName: System.IO.DirectoryInfo

Name                MemberType     Definition
----                ----------     ----------
Mode                CodeProperty   System.String Mode{get=Mode;}
Create              Method         void Create(), void Create(System.Securi...
CreateObjRef        Method         System.Runtime.Remoting.ObjRef CreateObj...
CreateSubdirectory  Method         System.IO.DirectoryInfo CreateSubdirecto...
...

The former provides meta information about an object, like its name, base type, which assembly its from, etc. (pipe the output of GetType() into Format-List * to get a full list).

The latter is mainly for obtaining information about the members (properties and methods) of an object (or the static members of a class if you use the parameter -Static). Note that if you want information about the members of a collection object you must use Get-Member -InputObject $col instead just $col | Get-Member, because using the pipeline would unroll the collection and you'd get the members of the collection elements rather than those of the collection object itself.

Once you know a class you'd normally look up further information in the documentation, e.g. by feeding a class or member name into your preferred search engine.

3
  • 1
    You can also do (Get-Item '.').GetType() -eq [System.IO.FileSystemInfo]), at least in PS5
    – jpaugh
    Aug 23, 2018 at 15:39
  • 1
    @jpaugh If you're already using PowerShell v5 you'd do (Get-Item .) -is [System.IO.FileSystemInfo]. That is only for checking if the object is of a specific type, though, not for finding out the type when you don't know it beforehand. Aug 23, 2018 at 15:49
  • Awesome, thanks! That actually works in a case where -eq does not, namely $value -is [PSCustomObject] (whereas fully spelling it out (as in $value.GetType() -eq [System.Management.Automation.PSCustomObject]) would otherwise be required.
    – jpaugh
    Aug 23, 2018 at 15:53
3

To get the Type name of a Object: (Get-Service | Get-Member)[0].TypeName

3

You could also simply test the type of object using -is

if ($array -is [Array]) {# then ok
  Write-Output 'Array'
}

if ($array -is [System.Collections.Arraylist] {# then not ok
  Write-Output 'ArrayList'
}
1

for looking at the type you can do:

expression | get-member

but if you can remove last 3 lines to file you can do it:

$yourfile='c:\temp\histo3.txt'
$content=Get-Content $yourfile
$content[0..[Math]::abs($content.Count - 4)] | Set-Content $yourfile

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