211

How can I convert an array object to string?

I tried:

$a = "This", "Is", "a", "cat"
[system.String]::Join(" ", $a)

with no luck. What are different possibilities in PowerShell?

2
  • 6
    See my answer but your code works just fine, too. Why do you say "with no luck"? Oct 11, 2011 at 9:30
  • 4
    Sorry, yes, it does seem to work, I think I messed up something when I tested this.
    – jrara
    Oct 11, 2011 at 9:41

6 Answers 6

343
$a = 'This', 'Is', 'a', 'cat'

Using double quotes (and optionally use the separator $ofs)

# This Is a cat
"$a"

# This-Is-a-cat
$ofs = '-' # after this all casts work this way until $ofs changes!
"$a"

Using operator join

# This-Is-a-cat
$a -join '-'

# ThisIsacat
-join $a

Using conversion to [string]

# This Is a cat
[string]$a

# This-Is-a-cat
$ofs = '-'
[string]$a
8
49

I found that piping the array to the Out-String cmdlet works well too.

For example:

PS C:\> $a  | out-string

This
Is
a
cat

It depends on your end goal as to which method is the best to use.

2
  • 5
    FYI: just doing $a would have the same effect as $a | out-string
    – JohnLBevan
    Oct 12, 2014 at 1:40
  • 8
    @JohnLBevan Not always. ($a | out-string).getType() = String. $a.getType() = Object[]. If you're using $a as an argument to a method expecting a string (such as invoke-expression for example), then $a | out-string has a clear advantage.
    – rojo
    Feb 26, 2016 at 13:44
24
1> $a = "This", "Is", "a", "cat"

2> [system.String]::Join(" ", $a)

Line two performs the operation and outputs to host, but does not modify $a:

3> $a = [system.String]::Join(" ", $a)

4> $a

This Is a cat

5> $a.Count

1
13

From a pipe

# This Is a cat
'This', 'Is', 'a', 'cat' | & {"$input"}

# This-Is-a-cat
'This', 'Is', 'a', 'cat' | & {$ofs='-';"$input"}

Write-Host

# This Is a cat
Write-Host 'This', 'Is', 'a', 'cat'

# This-Is-a-cat
Write-Host -Separator '-' 'This', 'Is', 'a', 'cat'

Example

2
  • 2
    This is amazing trick. The Example does not work anymore, and even though this answer is 5 years old, I try to explain what I learned today. The $ofs is Output Field Separator variable which is used when an array is converted into string for output. Here it is set in the script block returning string value of the input (array from the pipe) which gets executed by the command &. I didn't know about $ofs before, as well as & accepting a script block as argument Sep 18, 2019 at 11:18
  • $input variable learn.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/…
    – Winand
    Apr 8 at 16:39
4

You could specify type like this:

[string[]] $a = "This", "Is", "a", "cat"

Checking the type:

$a.GetType()

Confirms:

    IsPublic IsSerial Name                                     BaseType
    -------- -------- ----                                     --------
    True     True     String[]                                 System.Array

Outputting $a:

PS C:\> $a 
This 
Is 
a 
cat
0
$a = "This", "Is", "a", "cat"

foreach ( $word in $a ) { $sent = "$sent $word" }
$sent = $sent.Substring(1)

Write-Host $sent

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