I'm writing a PowerShell script to make several directories and copy a bunch of files together to "compile" some technical documentation. I'd like to generate a manifest of the files and directories as part of the readme file, and I'd like PowerShell to do this, since I'm already working in PowerShell to do the "compiling".
I've done some searching already, and it seems that I need to use the cmdlet "Get-ChildItem", but it's giving me too much data, and I'm not clear on how to format and prune out what I don't want to get my desired results.
I would like an output similar to this:
Directory
file
file
file
Directory
file
file
file
Subdirectory
file
file
file
or maybe something like this:
+---FinGen
| \---doc
+---testVBFilter
| \---html
\---winzip
In other words, some kind of basic visual ASCII representation of the tree structure with the directory and file names and nothing else. I have seen programs that do this, but I am not sure if PowerShell can do this.
Can PowerShell do this? If so, would Get-ChildItem be the right cmdlet?
tree
under CMD? You could get the info with Get-ChildItem and organise the output to the host depending on the items returned yes.