Get-Unique
Returns unique items from a sorted list.
Syntax
Get-Unique
[-InputObject <PSObject>]
[-AsString]
[-CaseInsensitive]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-Unique
[-InputObject <PSObject>]
[-OnType]
[-CaseInsensitive]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The Get-Unique
cmdlet compares each item in a sorted list to the next item, eliminates duplicates,
and returns only one instance of each item. The list must be sorted for the cmdlet to work properly.
By default, Get-Unique
is case-sensitive. As a result, strings that differ only in character
casing are considered to be unique.
Examples
Example 1: Get unique words in a text file
These commands find the number of unique words in a text file.
$A = $( foreach ($line in Get-Content C:\Test1\File1.txt) {
$line.tolower().split(" ")
}) | Sort-Object | Get-Unique
$A.count
The first command gets the content of the File.txt
file. It converts each line of text to
lowercase letters and then splits each word onto a separate line at the space (" "
). Then, it
sorts the resulting list alphabetically (the default) and uses the Get-Unique
cmdlet to eliminate
any duplicate words. The results are stored in the $A
variable.
The second command uses the Count property of the collection of strings in $A
to determine how
many items are in $A
.
Example 2: Get unique integers in an array
This command finds the unique members of the set of integers.
1,1,1,1,12,23,4,5,4643,5,3,3,3,3,3,3,3 | Sort-Object | Get-Unique
1
3
4
5
12
23
4643
The first command takes an array of integers typed at the command line, pipes them to the
Sort-Object
cmdlet to be sorted, and then pipes them to Get-Unique
, which eliminates duplicate
entries.
Example 3: Get unique object types in a directory
This command uses the Get-ChildItem
cmdlet to retrieve the contents of the local directory, which
includes files and directories.
Get-ChildItem | Sort-Object {$_.GetType()} | Get-Unique -OnType
The pipeline operator (|
) sends the results to the Sort-Object
cmdlet. The $_.GetType()
statement applies the GetType method to each file or directory. Then, Sort-Object
sorts the
items by type. Another pipeline operator sends the results to Get-Unique
. The OnType parameter
directs Get-Unique
to return only one object of each type.
Example 4: Get unique processes
This command gets the names of processes running on the computer with duplicates eliminated.
Get-Process | Sort-Object | Select-Object processname | Get-Unique -AsString
The Get-Process
command gets all of the processes on the computer. The pipeline operator (|
)
passes the result to Sort-Object
, which, by default, sorts the processes alphabetically by
ProcessName. The results are piped to the Select-Object
cmdlet, which selects only the values
of the ProcessName property of each object. The results are then piped to Get-Unique
to
eliminate duplicates.
The AsString parameter tells Get-Unique
to treat the ProcessName values as strings.
Without this parameter, Get-Unique
treats the ProcessName values as objects and returns only
one instance of the object, that is, the first process name in the list.
Example 5: Use case-sensitive comparisons to get unique strings
This example uses case-insensitive comparisons to get unique strings from an array of strings.
"aa", "Aa", "Bb", "bb", "aa" | Sort-Object -CaseSensitive | Get-Unique
aa
Aa
bb
Bb
Example 6: Use case-insensitive comparisons to get unique strings
This example uses case-insensitive comparisons to get unique strings from an array of strings.
"aa", "Aa", "Bb", "bb", "aa" | Sort-Object | Get-Unique -CaseInsensitive
aa
Bb
Parameters
-AsString
Indicates that this cmdlet uses the data as a string. Without this parameter, data is treated as an
object, so when you submit a collection of objects of the same type to Get-Unique
, such as a
collection of files, it returns just one (the first). You can use this parameter to find the unique
values of object properties, such as the file names.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-CaseInsensitive
By default, Get-Unique
is case-sensitive. When you use this parameter, the cmdlet uses
case-insensitive comparisons.
This parameter was added in PowerShell 7.4.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-InputObject
Specifies input for Get-Unique
. Enter a variable that contains the objects or type a command or
expression that gets the objects.
This cmdlet treats the input submitted using InputObject as a collection. It doesn't enumerate individual items in the collection. Because the collection is a single item, input submitted using InputObject is always returned unchanged.
Type: | PSObject |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-OnType
Indicates that this cmdlet returns only one object of each type.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Inputs
You can pipe any type of object to this cmdlet.
Outputs
This cmdlet returns its input objects without duplicates.
Notes
PowerShell includes the following aliases for Get-Unique
:
- All platforms:
gu
For more information, see about_Aliases.
To sort a list, use Sort-Object
. You can also use the Unique parameter of Sort-Object
to
find the unique items in a list.