ערוך

שתף באמצעות


Register-ArgumentCompleter

Registers a custom argument completer.

Syntax

Register-ArgumentCompleter
        -CommandName <String[]>
        -ScriptBlock <ScriptBlock>
        [-Native]
        [<CommonParameters>]
Register-ArgumentCompleter
        [-CommandName <String[]>]
        -ParameterName <String>
        -ScriptBlock <ScriptBlock>
        [<CommonParameters>]

Description

The Register-ArgumentCompleter cmdlet registers a custom argument completer. An argument completer allows you to provide dynamic tab completion, at run time for any command that you specify.

When you call this command with the CommandName parameter and without the ParameterName or Native parameters, the command runs as if you specified the Native parameter. This prevents the argument completer from working for PowerShell command parameters. Always specify the ParameterName parameter when you want to register an argument completer for PowerShell commands.

Examples

Example 1: Register a custom argument completer

The following example registers an argument completer for the Id parameter of the Set-TimeZone cmdlet.

$s = {
    param(
        $commandName,
        $parameterName,
        $wordToComplete,
        $commandAst,
        $fakeBoundParameters
    )

    (Get-TimeZone -ListAvailable).Id | Where-Object {
        $_ -like "$wordToComplete*"
    } | ForEach-Object {
        "'$_'"
    }
}

Register-ArgumentCompleter -CommandName Set-TimeZone -ParameterName Id -ScriptBlock $s

The first command creates a script block that takes the required parameters, which are passed in when the user presses Tab. For more information, see the ScriptBlock parameter description.

Within the script block, the available values for Id are retrieved using the Get-TimeZone cmdlet. The Id property for each Time Zone is piped to the Where-Object cmdlet. The Where-Object cmdlet filters out any ids that don't start with the value provided by $wordToComplete, which represents the text the user typed before they pressed Tab. The filtered ids are piped to the ForEach-Object cmdlet, which encloses each value in quotes to handle values that contain spaces.

The second command registers the argument completer by passing the scriptblock, the ParameterName Id and the CommandName Set-TimeZone.

Example 2: Add details to your tab completion values

The following example overwrites tab completion for the Name parameter of the Stop-Service cmdlet and only returns running services.

$s = {
    param(
        $commandName,
        $parameterName,
        $wordToComplete,
        $commandAst,
        $fakeBoundParameters
    )

    $services = Get-Service | Where-Object {
        $_.Status -eq 'Running' -and $_.Name -like "$wordToComplete*"
    }

    $services | ForEach-Object {
        New-Object -Type System.Management.Automation.CompletionResult -ArgumentList @(
            $_.Name          # completionText
            $_.Name          # listItemText
            'ParameterValue' # resultType
            $_.Name          # toolTip
        )
    }
}

Register-ArgumentCompleter -CommandName Stop-Service -ParameterName Name -ScriptBlock $s

The first command creates a script block that takes the required parameters, which are passed in when the user presses Tab. For more information, see the ScriptBlock parameter description.

Within the script block, the first command retrieves all running services using the Where-Object cmdlet. The services are piped to the ForEach-Object cmdlet. The ForEach-Object cmdlet creates a new System.Management.Automation.CompletionResult object and populates it with the name of the current service (represented by the pipeline variable $_.Name).

The CompletionResult object allows you to provide additional details to each returned value:

  • completionText (String) - The text to be used as the auto completion result. This is the value sent to the command.
  • listItemText (String) - The text to be displayed in a list, such as when the user presses Ctrl+Space. PowerShell uses this for display only. It isn't passed to the command when selected.
  • resultType (CompletionResultType) - The type of completion result.
  • toolTip (String) - The text for the tooltip with details to display about the object. This is visible when the user selects an item after pressing Ctrl+Space.

Example 3: Register a custom Native argument completer

You can use the Native parameter to provide tab-completion for a native command. The following example adds tab-completion for the dotnet Command Line Interface (CLI).

Note

The dotnet complete command is only available in version 2.0 and greater of the dotnet cli.

$scriptblock = {
    param(
        $wordToComplete,
        $commandAst,
        $cursorPosition
    )

    dotnet complete --position $cursorPosition $commandAst.ToString() | ForEach-Object {
        [System.Management.Automation.CompletionResult]::new(
            $_,               # completionText
            $_,               # listItemText
            'ParameterValue', # resultType
            $_                # toolTip
        )
    }
}

Register-ArgumentCompleter -Native -CommandName dotnet -ScriptBlock $scriptblock

The first command creates a script block that takes the required parameters, which are passed in when the user presses Tab. For more information, see the ScriptBlock parameter description.

Within the script block, the dotnet complete command performs the tab completion. The results are piped to the ForEach-Object cmdlet, which uses the new static method of the System.Management.Automation.CompletionResult class to create a CompletionResult object for each value.

Parameters

-CommandName

Specifies the name of one or more commands to register the argument completer for. This parameter is mandatory for native commands.

When you specify this parameter without the ParameterName or Native parameters, the command behaves as if you had specified the Native parameter. When registering argument completers for PowerShell commands, always specify the ParameterName parameter.

If you don't specify this parameter, PowerShell registers the argument completer for the specified ParameterName across all PowerShell commands.

Type:String[]
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

-Native

Indicates that the argument completer is for a native command where PowerShell can't complete parameter names.

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

-ParameterName

Specifies the name of the parameter the argument completer applies to. The type for specified parameters can't be an enumeration, such as the ForegroundColor parameter of the Write-Host cmdlet.

For more information on enums, see about_Enum.

When registering an argument completer for PowerShell commands, always specify this parameter. When you specify the CommandName parameter without the ParameterName or Native parameters, the command behaves as if you specified the Native parameter.

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

-ScriptBlock

Specifies the commands to run to perform tab completion. The script block you provide should return the values that complete the input. The script block must unroll the values using the pipeline (ForEach-Object, Where-Object, etc.), or another suitable method. Returning an array of values causes PowerShell to treat the entire array as one tab completion value.

The script block can also return System.Management.Automation.CompletionResult objects for each value to enhance the user experience. Returning CompletionResult objects enables you to define tooltips and custom list entries displayed when users press Ctrl+Space to show the list of available completions.

The script block must accept the following parameters in the order specified below. The names of the parameters aren't important because PowerShell passes in the values by position.

  • $commandName (Position 0, String) - This parameter is set to the name of the command for which the script block is providing tab completion.
  • $parameterName (Position 1, String) - This parameter is set to the parameter whose value requires tab completion.
  • $wordToComplete (Position 2, String) - This parameter is set to value the user has provided before they pressed Tab. Your script block should use this value to determine tab completion values.
  • $commandAst (Position 3, CommandAst) - This parameter is set to the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) for the current input line. For more information, see CommandAst Class.
  • $fakeBoundParameters (Position 4 IDictionary) - This parameter is set to a hashtable containing the $PSBoundParameters for the cmdlet, before the user pressed Tab. For more information, see about_Automatic_Variables.

When you specify the Native parameter, the script block must take the following parameters in the specified order. The names of the parameters aren't important because PowerShell passes in the values by position.

  • $wordToComplete (Position 0, String) - This parameter is set to value the user has provided before they pressed Tab. Your script block should use this value to determine tab completion values.
  • $commandAst (Position 1, CommandAst) - This parameter is set to the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) for the current input line. For more information, see CommandAst Class.
  • $cursorPosition (Position 2, Int32) - This parameter is set to the position of the cursor when the user pressed Tab.

You can also provide an ArgumentCompleter as a parameter attribute. For more information, see about_Functions_Advanced_Parameters.

Type:ScriptBlock
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.