60

I have an array of objects of the following structure:

structure Disk
{
  int UID;
  String Computer;
}

A computer may have a bunch of shared disks, and a disk may be shared among computers.

I want to find out all the disks common to all the computers. For example, I have computer A, B, and C; Disks 1, 2, and 3. The disk array is {1,A}, {1,B}, {2,A},{2,B},{2,C},{3,A}. The result that I want should be the disk 2, because it appears on A, B, and C.

Is there a effective way to achieve this?

With multiple foreach loops it's achievable, but definitely I want a better way. I'm thinking about operations like intersection, but didn't find this in PowerShell.

2
  • 1
    I would recommend to change the title to "Union, Intersection and Difference / Set Subtraction in PowerShell". So we'll have all set operations in one place. Apr 25, 2016 at 9:15
  • 1
    Based on the question and suggestions here, I have created a PowerShell function to do Union, Intersection and Minus for objects. Check it out: sqljana.wordpress.com/2015/09/23/… Dec 2, 2016 at 16:35

5 Answers 5

106

Assuming $arr is the array, you can do like this:

$computers = $arr | select -expand computer -unique
$arr | group uid | ?{$_.count -eq $computers.count} | select name

In general, I would approach union and intersection in Powershell like this:

$a = (1,2,3,4)
$b = (1,3,4,5)
$a + $b | select -uniq    #union
$a | ?{$b -contains $_}   #intersection

But for what you are asking, the above solution works well and not really about union and intersection in the standard definition of the terms.

Update:

I have written pslinq which provides Union-List and Intersect-List that help to achieve set union and intersection with Powershell.

5
  • Cool stuff, how would these oneliners work with keyed collections like Hashtables?
    – Bastl
    Nov 18, 2015 at 12:06
  • 1
    Great post -- there should be a standard library for arrays that provides functionality like that. lodash for powershell..
    – ferr
    Mar 2, 2016 at 20:25
  • 4
    for completeness you can get the set difference between $a and $b using $a | ?{$b -notcontains $_} #difference Jun 27, 2016 at 22:22
  • is anyone able to provide me a link to technet that shows me definition and/or examples of the ?{...} structure Jun 29, 2016 at 22:13
  • ? is an alias to Where-Object, so ? {} --> Where-Object -FilterScript {...}
    – Sigitas
    Sep 23, 2016 at 17:48
28

You can also do

$a = (1,2,3,4)
$b = (1,3,4,5)
Compare-Object $a $b -PassThru -IncludeEqual                   # union
Compare-Object $a $b -PassThru -IncludeEqual -ExcludeDifferent # intersection

Doesn't work if $a is null though.

1
  • 1
    Could add $null to the array. $a = 1,2,3,4,$null Jan 10, 2014 at 17:11
15

For set subtraction (a - b):

$a | ?{-not ($b -contains $_)}

2
  • 15
    There is also -notcontains. Jan 10, 2014 at 17:08
  • 2
    Narthan save people time and write it out next time :) $a | ?{$b -notcontains $_} Feb 23, 2021 at 14:28
13

While this won't work in the earliest versions, in more recent versions you can just call the .NET LINQ extension functions directly, e.g.

[system.linq.enumerable]::union([object[]](1,2,3),[object[]](2,3,4))

(Without the cast to some enumerable type, PowerShell throws a "cannot find overload" error.)

This definitely works in PowerShell V4 and V5 and definitely doesn't in V2. I don't have a system at hand with V3.

2

I realised no-one answered your specific example of computers a, b, c, with disks numbered 1, 2, 3 attached. Code and output given for Intersection, Union and Set difference across the three sets

Code

$a = @(1, 2, 3)
$b = @(1, 2)
$c = @(2)

'Intersection $a ⋂ $b ⋂ $c'
$a | Where-Object {$_ -In $b} | Where-Object {$_ -In $c}

'Union $a ⋃ $b ⋃ $c'
$a + $b + $c | Select-Object -Unique

'Set difference $a - $b - $c (items in $a but not $b or $c)'
$a | Where-Object {$_ -NotIn $b} | Where-Object {$_ -NotIn $c}

Output

Intersection $a ⋂ $b ⋂ $c
2
Union $a ⋃ $b ⋃ $c
1
2
3
Set difference $a - $b - $c (items in $a but not $b or $c)
3
1
  • 1
    Marvellous post.. Just what I was after..
    – veenz
    Jul 23, 2022 at 6:09

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