Selects specified properties of an object or set of objects. It can also select unique objects from an array of objects, or it can select a specified number of objects from the beginning or end of an array of objects. (Select-Object)
NAMESelect-ObjectSYNOPSISSelects specified properties of an object or set of objects. It can also select unique objects from an array of objects, or it can select a specified number of objects from the beginning or end of an array of objects.SYNTAXSelect-Object [[-Property] <Object[]>] [-ExcludeProperty <string[]>] [-ExpandProperty <string>] [-First <int>] [-InputObject <psobject>] [-Last <int>] [-Skip <int>] [-Unique] [<CommonParameters>] Select-Object [-Index <Int32[]>] [-InputObject <psobject>] [-Unique] [<CommonParameters>]DESCRIPTIONThe Select-Object cmdlet gets only the specified properties of an object or set of objects. It can also select unique objects from an array of objects, or it can select a specified number of objects from the beginning or end of an array of objects. If you use Select-Object to select specified properties, it copies the values of those properties from the input objects and creates new objects that have the specified properties and copied values. Use the Property parameter to specify the properties you want to select. Or, use the First, Last, Unique, Skip, and Index parameters to select particular objects from an array of input objects. For more specific object filtering, use the Where-Object cmdlet.PARAMETERS-ExcludeProperty <string[]> Removes the specifies properties from the selection. Wildcards are permitted. This parameter is effective only when the command also includes the Property parameter. The value of the property parameter can be a calculated property, which is a hash table that specifies a name and calculates a value for the property display. Valid keys are: -- Name or Label <string> -- Expression <string> or <scriptblock> For more information, see the examples. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? true -ExpandProperty <string> Specifies a property to select, and indicates that an attempt should be made to expand that property. Wildcards are permitted in the property name. For example, if the specified property is an array, each value of the array is included in the output. If the property contains an object, the properties of that object are displayed in the output. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? true -First <int> Specifies the number of objects to select from the beginning of an array of input objects. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? false -Index <Int32[]> Selects objects from an array based on their index values. Enter the indexes in a comma-separated list. Indexes in an array begin with 0, where 0 represents the first value and (n-1) represents the last value. Required? false Position? named Default value None Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? false -InputObject <psobject> Specifies objects to send to the cmdlet through the pipeline. This parameter enables you to pipe objects to Select-Object. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? true (ByValue) Accept wildcard characters? false -Last <int> Specifies the number of objects to select from the end of an array of input objects. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? false -Property <Object[]> Specifies the properties to select. Wildcards are permitted. The value of the Property parameter can be a new calculated property. To create a calculated, property, use a hash table. Valid keys are: -- Name (or Label) <string> -- Expression <string> or <script block> Required? false Position? 1 Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? true -Skip <int> Skips (does not select) the specified number of items. By default, the Skip parameter counts from the beginning of the array or list of objects, but if the command uses the Last parameter, it counts from the end of the list or array. Unlike the Index parameter, which starts counting from 0, the Skip parameter begins at 1. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? false -Unique [<SwitchParameter>] Specifies that if a subset of the input objects has identical properties and values, only a single member of the subset will be selected. Required? false Position? named Default value Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? false <CommonParameters> This cmdlet supports the common parameters: Verbose, Debug, ErrorAction, ErrorVariable, WarningAction, WarningVariable, OutBuffer and OutVariable. For more information, type, "get-help about_commonparameters".INPUTSSystem.Management.Automation.PSObject You can pipe any object to Select-Object.OUTPUTSSystem.Management.Automation.PSObjectNOTESYou can also refer to Select-Object by its built-in alias, "select". For more information, see about_Aliases.Examples
EXAMPLE 1C:\PS>get-process | select-object ProcessName,Id,WSDescription----------- This command displays a list of processes. Only the name, ID, and working set (WS) properties of the processes are displayed.EXAMPLE 2C:\PS>get-process | select-object processname -expandproperty modules | format-list ProcessName : 00THotkey Size : 256 Company : TOSHIBA Corporation FileVersion : 1, 0, 0, 27 ProductVersion : 6, 2, 0, 0Description: THotkey Product : TOSHIBA THotkey ModuleName : 00THotkey.exe FileName : C:\WINDOWS\system32\00THotkey.exe BaseAddress : 4194304Description----------- This command displays information about the modules used by the processes running on a computer. It uses the ExpandProperty parameter to display the details contained within the modules property.EXAMPLE 3C:\PS>get-process | sort-object -property WS | select-object -Last 5 Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VS(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName ------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- ----------- 2866 320 33432 45764 203 222.41 1292 svchost 577 17 23676 50516 265 50.58 4388 WINWORD 826 11 75448 76712 188 19.77 3780 Ps 1367 14 73152 88736 216 61.69 676 Ps 1612 44 66080 92780 380 900.59 6132 INFOPATHDescription----------- This command displays the five processes that are using the most memory. The Sort-Object cmdlet is used to sort the processes according to memory (working set) usage, and the Select-Object cmdlet is used to select only the last five members of the resulting array of objects.EXAMPLE 4C:\PS>get-process | select-object -property ProcessName,@{Name="Start Day"; Expression = {$_.StartTime.DayOfWeek}} ProcessName StartDay ---- -------- alg Wednesday ati2evxx Wednesday ati2evxx Thursday ...Description----------- This command displays the name and start day of the processes running on a computer. The values of the Property parameter are ProcessName and a calculated property named "Start Day." The "Start Day" property is added by using a hash table with Name and Expression keys.EXAMPLE 5C:\PS>"a","b","c","a","a","a" | select-object -unique a b cDescription----------- This command displays unique characters from an array of characters.EXAMPLE 6C:\PS>$a = get-eventlog -log "Windows PowerShell" C:\PS> $a | select-object -index 0, ($a.count - 1)Description----------- These commands get the first (newest) and last (oldest) events in the Windows Powershell event log. The first command uses the Get-EventLog cmdlet to get all events in the Windows Powershell log. It saves the events in the $a variable. The second command uses a pipeline operator (|) to send the events in $a to the Select-Object cmdlet. The Select-Object command uses the Index parameter to select items by their index number. The index for the first event is 0. The index for the last event is the number of items in $a minus 1.EXAMPLE 7C:\PS>new-pssession -computername (get-content servers.txt | select-object -skip 1)Description----------- This command creates a new PSSession on each of the computers listed in the Servers.txt files, except for the first one. This command uses the Select-Object cmdlet to select all but the first computer in a list of computer names. The resulting list of computers is set as the value of the ComputerName parameter of the New-PSSession cmdlet. RELATED LINKS Online version: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=113387 Where-Object Group-Object Sort-Object C:\Windows>powershell get-help Group-Object -full
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