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Windows PowerShell Language Specification 3.0

The Windows PowerShell Language Specification 3.0 was published in December 2012 and is based on PowerShell 3.0. The specification document is available as a Microsoft Word document from the Microsoft Download Center at: https://www.microsoft.com/download/details.aspx?id=36389

That Word document has been converted for presentation here on Microsoft Learn. During conversion, some editorial changes have been made to accommodate formatting for the Docs platform. Some typos and minor errors have been corrected.

Important

The contents of this documentation may not reflect the current state of PowerShell in its current version. There is no plan to update this documentation to reflect the current state. This documentation is presented here for historical reference.

1. Introduction

PowerShell is a command-line shell and scripting language, designed especially for system administrators.

Most shells operate by executing a command or utility in a new process, and presenting the results to the user as text. These shells also have commands that are built into the shell and run in the shell process. Because there are few built-in commands, many utilities have been created to supplement them. PowerShell is very different. Instead of processing text, the shell processes objects. PowerShell also includes a large set of built-in commands with each having a consistent interface and these can work with user-written commands.

An object is a data entity that has properties (i.e., characteristics) and methods (i.e., actions that can be performed on the object). All objects of the same type have the same base set of properties and methods, but each instance of an object can have different property values.

A major advantage of using objects is that it is much easier to pipeline commands; that is, to write the output of one command to another command as input. (In a traditional command-line environment, the text output from one command needs to be manipulated to meet the input format of another.)

PowerShell includes a very rich scripting language that supports constructs for looping, conditions, flow-control, and variable assignment. This language has syntax features and keywords similar to those used in the C# programming language (§C.).

There are four kinds of commands in PowerShell: scripts, functions and methods, cmdlets, and native commands.

  • A file of commands is called a script. By convention, a script has a filename extension of .ps1. The top-most level of a PowerShell program is a script, which, in turn, can invoke other commands.

  • PowerShell supports modular programming via named procedures. A procedure written in PowerShell is called a function, while an external procedure made available by the execution environment (and typically written in some other language) is called a method.

  • A cmdlet (pronounced "command-let") is a simple, single-task command-line tool. Although a cmdlet can be used on its own, the full power of cmdlets is realized when they are used in combination to perform complex tasks.

  • A native command is part of the host environment.

Each time the PowerShell runtime environment begins execution, it begins what is called a session. Commands then execute within the context of that session.

This specification defines the PowerShell language, the built-in cmdlets, and the use of objects via the pipeline.

Unlike most shells, which accept and return text, Windows PowerShell is built on top of the .NET Framework common language runtime (CLR) and the .NET Framework, and accepts and returns .NET Framework objects.