This article mainly introduces the use of PowerShell script inverted quotation mark usages: Anywhere to line code, in the face of some very long lines of code is very useful, general programming code a line of characters not more than 80 oh, need friends can refer to the
To enhance readability, everyone likes to split a long script into multiple lines that could have been written in one line.
The code is as follows:
Get-service | Where-object {$_. Status-eq ' Running '}
Get-service |
Where-object {$_. Status-eq ' Running '}
After the pipe symbol is finished, we can wrap the line directly. Sometimes when you encounter curly braces, you can also wrap them in a very secure line:
The code is as follows:
Get-service |
Where-object {
$_. Status-eq ' Running '
}
But there's also a situation where you might want to wrap the script at any time, and you can use the inverted quotation mark (which is the escape character in PowerShell).
The code is as follows:
Get-service |
Where-object '
{
$_. Status-eq ' Running '
}