103

In my batch file, I call the PowerShell script like this:

powershell.exe "& "G:\Karan\PowerShell_Scripts\START_DEV.ps1"

Now, I want to pass a string parameter to START_DEV.ps1. Let's say the parameter is w=Dev.

How can I do this?

1
  • 1
    Does the script expect named parameter or an anonymous one?
    – vonPryz
    Jun 15, 2011 at 15:12

5 Answers 5

163

Let's say you would like to pass the string Dev as a parameter, from your batch file:

powershell -command "G:\Karan\PowerShell_Scripts\START_DEV.ps1 Dev"

put inside your powershell script head:

$w = $args[0]       # $w would be set to "Dev"

This if you want to use the built-in variable $args. Otherwise:

 powershell -command "G:\Karan\PowerShell_Scripts\START_DEV.ps1 -Environment \"Dev\""

and inside your powershell script head:

param([string]$Environment)

This if you want a named parameter.

You might also be interested in returning the error level:

powershell -command "G:\Karan\PowerShell_Scripts\START_DEV.ps1 Dev; exit $LASTEXITCODE"

The error level will be available inside the batch file as %errorlevel%.

0
28

Assuming your script is something like the below snippet and named testargs.ps1

param ([string]$w)
Write-Output $w

You can call this at the commandline as:

PowerShell.Exe -File C:\scripts\testargs.ps1 "Test String"

This will print "Test String" (w/o quotes) at the console. "Test String" becomes the value of $w in the script.

18

When a script is loaded, any parameters that are passed are automatically loaded into a special variables $args. You can reference that in your script without first declaring it.

As an example, create a file called test.ps1 and simply have the variable $args on a line by itself. Invoking the script like this, generates the following output:

PowerShell.exe -File test.ps1 a b c "Easy as one, two, three"
a
b
c
Easy as one, two, three

As a general recommendation, when invoking a script by calling PowerShell directly I would suggest using the -File option rather than implicitly invoking it with the & - it can make the command line a bit cleaner, particularly if you need to deal with nested quotes.

9

Add the parameter declaration at the top of ps1 file

test.ps1

param(
  # Our preferred encoding
  [parameter(Mandatory=$false)]
  [ValidateSet("UTF8","Unicode","UTF7","ASCII","UTF32","BigEndianUnicode")]
  [string]$Encoding = "UTF8"
)

write ("Encoding : {0}" -f $Encoding)

Result

C:\temp> .\test.ps1 -Encoding ASCII
Encoding : ASCII
9

The answer from @Emiliano is excellent. You can also pass named parameters like so:

powershell.exe -Command 'G:\Karan\PowerShell_Scripts\START_DEV.ps1' -NamedParam1 "SomeDataA" -NamedParam2 "SomeData2"

Note the parameters are outside the command call, and you'll use:

[parameter(Mandatory=$false)]
  [string]$NamedParam1,
[parameter(Mandatory=$false)]
  [string]$NamedParam2

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