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Set-StrictMode

Establishes and enforces coding rules in expressions, scripts, and script blocks.

Syntax

Set-StrictMode
   -Version <Version>
   [<CommonParameters>]
Set-StrictMode
   [-Off]
   [<CommonParameters>]

Description

The Set-StrictMode cmdlet configures strict mode for the current scope and all child scopes, and turns it on and off. When strict mode is on, PowerShell generates a terminating error when the content of an expression, script, or script block violates basic best-practice coding rules.

Use the Version parameter to determine the coding rules to enforce.

Set-PSDebug -Strict cmdlet turns on strict mode for the global scope. Set-StrictMode affects only the current scope and its child scopes. Then, you can use it in a script or function to override the setting inherited from the global scope.

When Set-StrictMode is off, PowerShell has the following behaviors:

  • Uninitialized variables are assumed to have a value of 0 (zero) or $Null, depending on type
  • References to non-existent properties return $Null
  • Results of improper function syntax vary with the error conditions
  • Attempting to retrieve a value using an invalid index in an array returns $Null

Examples

Example 1: Turn on strict mode as version 1.0

# Strict mode is off by default.
$a -gt 5

False

Set-StrictMode -Version 1.0
$a -gt 5

InvalidOperation: The variable '$a' cannot be retrieved because it has not been set.

With strict mode set to version 1.0, attempts to reference variables that aren't initialized fail.

Example 2: Turn on strict mode as version 2.0

# Strict mode is off by default.
function add ($a, $b) {
    '$a = ' + $a
    '$b = ' + $b
    '$a+$b = ' + ($a + $b)
}
add 3 4

$a = 3
$b = 4
$a+$b = 7

add(3,4)

$a = 3 4
$b =
$a+$b = 3 4

Set-StrictMode -Version 2.0
add(3,4)

InvalidOperation: The function or command was called as if it were a method. Parameters should be separated by spaces. For information about parameters, see the about_Parameters Help topic.

Set-StrictMode -Off
$string = "This is a string."
$null -eq $string.Month

True

Set-StrictMode -Version 2.0
$string = "This is a string."
$null -eq $string.Month

PropertyNotFoundException: The property 'Month' cannot be found on this object. Verify that the property exists.

This command turns strict mode on and sets it to version 2.0. As a result, PowerShell returns an error if you use method syntax, which uses parentheses and commas, for a function call or reference uninitialized variables or non-existent properties.

The sample output shows the effect of version 2.0 strict mode.

Without version 2.0 strict mode, the (3,4) value is interpreted as a single array object to which nothing is added. With version 2.0 strict mode, it's correctly interpreted as faulty syntax for submitting two values.

Without version 2.0, the reference to the non-existent Month property of a string returns only $Null. With version 2.0, it's interpreted correctly as a reference error.

Example 3: Turn on strict mode as version 3.0

With strict mode set to Off, invalid or out of bounds indexes result return null values.

# Strict mode is off by default.
$a = @(1)
$null -eq $a[2]
$null -eq $a['abc']

True
True

Set-StrictMode -Version 3.0
$a = @(1)
$null -eq $a[2]
$null -eq $a['abc']

OperationStopped: Index was outside the bounds of the array.

InvalidArgument: Cannot convert value "abc" to type "System.Int32". Error: "Input string was not in a correct format."

With strict mode set to version 3 or higher, invalid or out of bounds indexes result in errors.

Parameters

-Off

Indicates that this cmdlet turns strict mode off for the current scope and all child scopes.

Type:SwitchParameter
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

-Version

Specifies the conditions that cause an error in strict mode. This parameter accepts any valid PowerShell version number. Any number higher than 3 is treated as Latest. The value supplied must be the string Latest or a string that can be converted to a System.Version type. The version must match a valid release version of PowerShell.

The effective values for this parameter are:

  • 1.0
    • Prohibits references to uninitialized variables, except for uninitialized variables in strings.
  • 2.0
    • Prohibits references to uninitialized variables. This includes uninitialized variables in strings.
    • Prohibits references to non-existent properties of an object.
    • Prohibits function calls that use the syntax for calling methods.
  • 3.0
    • Prohibits references to uninitialized variables. This includes uninitialized variables in strings.
    • Prohibits references to non-existent properties of an object.
    • Prohibits function calls that use the syntax for calling methods.
    • Prohibit out of bounds or unresolvable array indexes.
  • Latest
    • Selects the latest version available. The latest version is the most strict. Use this value to make sure that scripts use the strictest available version, even when new versions are added to PowerShell.

Caution

Using Latest for Version in scripts isn't deterministic. The meaning of Latest can change in new releases of PowerShell. A script written for an older version of PowerShell that uses Set-StrictMode -Version Latest is subject to more restrictive rules when run in a newer version of PowerShell.

Type:Version
Aliases:v
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

Inputs

None

You can't pipe objects to this cmdlet.

Outputs

None

This cmdlet returns no output.

Notes

While the Version parameter accepts values greater than 3.0, there are no additional rules defined for anything higher than 3.0.

Set-StrictMode is effective only in the scope it's set in and in its child scopes. For more information about scopes in PowerShell, see about_Scopes.