First, make some example files:
2010..2015 | % { "" | Set-Content "example $_.txt" }
#example 2010.txt
#example 2011.txt
#example 2012.txt
#example 2013.txt
#example 2014.txt
#example 2015.txt
What I want to do is match the year with a regex capture group, then reference the match with $matches[1]
and use it. I can write this to do both in one scriptblock, in one cmdlet, and it works fine:
gci *.txt | foreach {
if ($_ -match '(\d+)') # regex match the year
{ # on the current loop variable
$matches[1] # and use the capture group immediately
}
}
#2010
#2011
#.. etc
I can also write this to do the match in one scriptblock, and then reference $matches
in another cmdlet's scriptblock later on:
gci *.txt | where {
$_ -match '(\d+)' # regex match here, in the Where scriptblock
} | foreach { # pipeline!
$matches[1] # use $matches which was set in the previous
# scriptblock, in a different cmdlet
}
Which has the same output and it appears to work fine. But is it guaranteed to work, or is it undefined and a coincidence?
Could 'example 2012.txt'
get matched, then buffered. 'example 2013.txt'
gets matched, then buffered. | foreach
gets to work on 'example 2012.txt'
but $matches
has already been updated with 2013
and they're out of sync?
I can't make them fall out of sync - but I could still be relying on undefined behaviour.
(FWIW, I prefer the first approach for clarity and readability as well).
$_.Name -match '(\d{4})'
would be a better RegEx. But a very good question indeed.gci *.txt | %{ $_ -match '.*'; $matches[0] }
to match everything and output it, I get just the path and filename and nothing else, as I'd expect. How did you run it?$_
is forced into a string context in the context of using the-match
operator in the given command, it expands differently than on Windows PowerShell (on macOS it expands as it would when outputting to the console, as opposed to how it should in string interpolation).-a---- 2016-12-01 23:47 2 example 2012.txt
matches[1] was 2016 here.