November 30th, 2006

PowerShell Documentation Pack

PowerShell Team
PowerShell Team

What to learn about Windows PowerShell without installing it?  Download our Windows PowerShell 1.0 Documentation Pack

Overview

The documents included are:

  • The “Getting Started Guide”, a 32-page introduction to using the shell and the Powerscript language supported by the Windows PowerShell (GettingStarted.rtf).
  • A Windows PowerShell Language Quick Reference (quadfold.rtf).
  • The “PowerShell User Guide” (userguide.rtf), a companion document to the Getting Started Guide. You should get yourself familiar with the contents of the Getting Started Guide as this document will build on the content and concepts of the Getting Started document.
    In this guide, you will find the features of the new shell documented with examples of how to use the new shell along with reasons for the behavioral choices that were made as this shell was being built. Also, this document includes examples of how to migrate VBScript to Powerscritp. Lastly, this document contains information for VB and C# developers and how Powerscript differs from those environments and how, as a developer, you can take full advantage of this new shell.

I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised at how good/useful this documentation (as well as our help) is.

BTW  – our Doc team is very eager to hear about any comments or problems you have with the documentation so let let us know.  You can leave comments here, post them to our newsgroup or see http://blogs.msdn.com/powershell/archive/2006/05/09/filing-bugs.aspx for details on how to file a bug.

Jeffrey Snover [MSFT]
Windows PowerShell/MMC Architect
Visit the Windows PowerShell Team blog at:    http://blogs.msdn.com/PowerShell
Visit the Windows PowerShell ScriptCenter at:  http://www.microsoft.com/technet/scriptcenter/hubs/msh.mspx

Category
PowerShell

Author

PowerShell Team
PowerShell Team

PowerShell is a task-based command-line shell and scripting language built on .NET. PowerShell helps system administrators and power-users rapidly automate tasks that manage operating systems (Linux, macOS, and Windows) and processes.

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