There are two methods for filtering files: globbing using an Wildcard, or using a Regular Expression (Regex).
Warning: The globbing method has the drawback that it also matches files which should not be matched, like *.jsx
.
# globbing with Wildcard filter
# the error action prevents the output of errors
# (ie. directory requires admin rights and is inaccessible)
Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Filter '*.js' -ErrorAction 'SilentlyContinue'
# filter by Regex
Where-Object { $_.Name -Match '.*\.js$' }
You then can sort by name or filesize as needed:
# sort the output
Sort-Object -PropertyName 'Length'
Format it a simple list of path and filename:
# format output
Format-List -Property ('Path','Name')
To remove the file extension, you can use an select to map the result:
Select-Item { $_.Name.Replace( ".js", "") }
Putting it all together, there is also a very short version, which you should not use in scripts, because it's hardly readable:
ls -r | ? { $_.Name -matches '.*\.js' } | sort Length | % { $_.Name.Replace( ".js", "") | fl