Interesting question......As you have discovered you cannot use negative values for defining positional arguments. Closest I found for a reference for this was from about_Functions_Advanced_Parameters:
The value of the Position argument is specified as an integer. A position
value of 0 represents the first position in the command, a position
value of 1 represents the second position in the command, and so on.
That would be the best support for the lack of negative values. Documentation could be wrong but as you experimented it does not work.
However, I think I figured out an easy way to deal with this. Consider the following function which contains both named and "positional"ish parameters. We use the advanced function parameter ValueFromRemainingArguments
. Note that I used quotes several times in this answer around "positional" since they are not true positional parameters.
function Das-Bagel{
param (
[String]$namedParam,
[parameter(Mandatory=$true,
ValueFromRemainingArguments=$true)]
[String[]]$remainingArguments
)
$param1 = $remainingArguments[-1]
$param2 = $remainingArguments[-2]
$param3 = $remainingArguments[-3]
Get-Variable -Name param* | select name, value
}
All it will do is display the param# variables and their values. That being said lets look at the output from these 2 different commands. First with only the one "positional" parameter.
PS C:\Users\Cameron> Das-Bagel -namedParam This First
Name Value
---- -----
param1 First
param2
param3
Now we run with 3 "positional" parameters
PS C:\Users\Cameron> Das-Bagel -namedParam This First Second Third
Name Value
---- -----
param1 Third
param2 Second
param3 First
The first has only the one other parameter beyond the named therefore it goes in the first position. In the second example it becomes the third parameter. Parameters not present will show as nulls for their respective variables. PowerShell is nice in that way in that it will not cause an error (be default). You would need to account for that possibility in your code but I imagine you have that covered.
Also since we made it mandatory the function call would fail if we omitted the "positional" parameters.
$args
possibly. You are trying to do backwards what PowerShell was designed to do.