26

I am trying to output values of each rows from a DataSet:

for ($i=0;$i -le $ds.Tables[1].Rows.Count;$i++)
{
  Write-Host 'value is : ' + $i + ' ' + $ds.Tables[1].Rows[$i][0]
}

gives the output ...

value is :  +0+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[0][0] 
value is :  +1+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[1][0] 
value is :  +2+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[2][0] 
value is :  +3+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[3][0] 
value is :  +4+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[4][0] 
value is :  +5+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[5][0] 
value is :  +6+ +System.Data.DataSet.Tables[1].Rows[6][0] 

How do I get the actual value from the column?

3 Answers 3

46

The PowerShell string evaluation is calling ToString() on the DataSet. In order to evaluate any properties (or method calls), you have to force evaluation by enclosing the expression in $()

for($i=0;$i -lt $ds.Tables[1].Rows.Count;$i++)
{ 
  write-host "value is : $i $($ds.Tables[1].Rows[$i][0])"
}

Additionally foreach allows you to iterate through a collection or array without needing to figure out the length.

Rewritten (and edited for compile) -

foreach ($Row in $ds.Tables[1].Rows)
{ 
  write-host "value is : $($Row[0])"
}
1
  • If there are multiple columns in each row, how can we access a particular column value?
    – Ajay Meda
    Mar 3, 2022 at 22:09
17

Here's a practical example (build a dataset from your current location):

$ds = new-object System.Data.DataSet
$ds.Tables.Add("tblTest")
[void]$ds.Tables["tblTest"].Columns.Add("Name",[string])
[void]$ds.Tables["tblTest"].Columns.Add("Path",[string])

dir | foreach {
    $dr = $ds.Tables["tblTest"].NewRow()
    $dr["Name"] = $_.name
    $dr["Path"] = $_.fullname
    $ds.Tables["tblTest"].Rows.Add($dr)
}


$ds.Tables["tblTest"]

$ds.Tables["tblTest"] is an object that you can manipulate just like any other Powershell object:

$ds.Tables["tblTest"] | foreach {
    write-host 'Name value is : $_.name
    write-host 'Path value is : $_.path
}
2

The parser is having trouble concatenating your string. Try this:

write-host 'value is : '$i' '$($ds.Tables[1].Rows[$i][0])

Edit: Using double quotes might also be clearer since you can include the expressions within the quoted string:

write-host "value is : $i $($ds.Tables[1].Rows[$i][0])"
2
  • zdan - close, but you should have double quotes around the whole string (single quotes don't allow evaluation). and you don't need the additional quotes or backticks (tough to tell which they are) in the string. Apr 29, 2009 at 23:13
  • The evaluations are performed outside the single quotes and concatenated with the quoted strings which would be equivalent to enclosing the whole thing in double quotes. I agree that would be clearer, but I wanted to match his original question.
    – zdan
    Apr 30, 2009 at 0:24

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