New
Ok, I understand what you'd like to do.
So, as it turns out, the way Where-Object works is that you can put a filter block, just like in ForEach-Object, and if the filter emits and object, then matching objects continue down the pipeline.
With that being said, I think this would be much simpler as a Dir | Where | ForEach, rather than this much more complex mega-Where you've got going on.
In your example, you've got a regex looking for files which contain between 2 and 4 digits in them. If the file contains the numbers 291, or 292, you don't want to process them.
To replicate this, i've got a directory full of ISO files, called 290.iso, 291.iso, 292.iso and so on.
If this works, we should see a list of ISOs retured at the end of the Pipeline, minus the ones with the 'offending' digits, which we do not want.
Dir t:\ 2*.iso | Where {$_.BaseName -match $pattern} | ForEach-Object{
if ($_.BaseName -in (291,292)) {$null}
else{$_}
}
Results:
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
-a---- 12/1/2015 12:40 PM 12 290.iso
-a---- 12/1/2015 12:40 PM 12 293.iso
-a---- 12/1/2015 12:40 PM 12 294.iso
-a---- 12/1/2015 12:40 PM 12 295.iso
So, in your case, you'd just add one more ForEach to the end of the pipeline to process these macros or whatever you'd like to do.
Get-ChildItem $folder -Filter "*.$($extension)" |
Where-Object {$_.BaseName -match $pattern} |
ForEach {
#Dump the files is their name contains any of these numbers
if ($_.BaseName -in (291,292)) {$null}
else{$_}
} | ForEach-Object {
#Run your macros here
}
Possibly a better approach would be to collect the files we DO want to work with in a variable, and then use ForEach on those.
#Only return files with numbers in the name
$MatchingFiles = Get-ChildItem $folder -Filter "*.$($extension)" |
Where-Object {$_.BaseName -match $pattern}
#Remove files with 291, 292 in their name
$FilteredFiles = $MatchingFiles |
ForEach {
#Dump the files is their name contains any of these numbers
if ($_.BaseName -in (291,292)) {$null}
else{$_}
}
#Run the macros for each file remaining
ForEach ($file in $FilteredFiles){
#Run your macros here
}
I know this doesn't answer your switch question, but I think this is a better approach to take. I'd hate to inherit the working Switch you come up with to accomplish this task.
OLD
This is kind of a strange usage of Where-Object, and if I may be totally honest, I'm not sure what this is attempting to accomplish. I've found that you'll always get better answers here if you'll explain what your code wants to do.
That being said, this works for me if I change your Where-Object into a ForEach-Object.
Functionally, your switch works. When I tested with this code structure:
forEach ($variable in (290..295)){
switch ($variable) {
{291,292 -contains $_} {
Write-Host "Skip these numbers... $variable"
break
}
default {
"We won't skip this one $variable"#process other numbers
}
}
}
Output:
We won't skip this one 290
Skip these numbers.... 291
Skip these numbers.... 292
We won't skip this one 293
We won't skip this one 294
We won't skip this one 295
So, I think the problem is that you're using the wrong cmdlet for this job. If I'm wrong and you have a good reason for using Where-Object, I'd love to learn it, so please let me know :)
Get-ChildItem
"? Do you mean it's inside aForEach-Object
? Please show your actual code.