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I wanted to filter out or exclude the two or more licenses assigned to the user by using the below simple query, but it is not doing anything.

The line below still includes the two licenses described in the $Skip variable:

#License to ignore
$Skip = 'M365_E5', 'FLOW_FREE'  

$SKU = @(Get-MgUserLicenseDetail -UserId '[email protected]') | 
            Where-Object { $_.SkuPartNumber -notcontains $Skip } 

Appendix: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/microsoft.graph.users/get-mguserlicensedetail?view=graph-powershell-1.0#-filter

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    In short: -contains / -notcontains are collection operators: they test if the LHS object is equal in full to at least one element of the RHS collection. They are not to be confused with the .Contains() .NET method for substring matching. While PowerShell has no equivalent operator for literal substring matching, you can use -like with wildcard expressions or -match with regular expressions, both of which are case-insensitive.
    – mklement0
    Dec 12, 2022 at 16:35
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    The right side of -contains gets converted into a string so 'M365_E5 FLOW_FREE' And this is true 'M365_E5 FLOW_FREE' -contains 'M365_E5','FLOW_FREE'
    – js2010
    Dec 12, 2022 at 17:39

1 Answer 1

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The -[not]contains operator(s) is for collection containment - whereas you want to perform one or more substring searches, preferably using the -like or -match operators.

To if any of a given number of terms is found as a substring in a given input string, use the .Where() extension method in First-mode:

... |Where-Object { $SkuPartNumber = $_.SkuPartNumber; @($Skip).Where({$SkuPartNumber -like "*$_*"}, 'First').Count -eq 0 }

If any of the strings in $Skip is found in the part number, the Count of the resulting value will be greater than 0 and the object won't filter through.


As an alternative approach, you could also construct a regex pattern matching either term and use that with the -notmatch regex operator:

# generate a valid regex pattern in the form (?:term1|term2|...|termN)
$SkipPattern = '(?:{0})' -f $($Skip.ForEach({[regex]::Escape($_)}) -join '|')

Then:

... |Where-Object { $_.SkuPartNumber -notmatch $SkipPattern}
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  • yes, this is so cool, I've learn something new here, that you can add more lines inside the Where-Object clause :-) Thank you for your help. Dec 13, 2022 at 0:23

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