I have an array of file names in Powershell, and I would like to prepend a path to each of them and get the result in a new array.
In C# I could do this using Linq...
var files = new string[] { "file1.txt", "file2.txt" };
var path = "c:\temp\";
var filesWithPath = files.Select(f => path + f).ToArray();
But what is the idiomatic way to do this in Powershell? It looks like there is a foreach syntax I could use, but I figure there must be a more concise, functional way to do it.
An array in Powershell is declared with @()
syntax. %
is shorthand for foreach-object
. Let's declare an array with all the file names and loop through it with foreach. join-path
combines a path and a child path into a single path.
$files = @("file1.txt", "file2.txt")
$pFiles = $files | % {join-path "c:\temp" $_ }
$pFiles
Output:
c:\temp\file1.txt
c:\temp\file2.txt
NB: if the input consists of single an element, foreach will not return a collection. If an array is desired, either use explicit type or wrap the results. Like so,
[array]$pFiles = $files | % {join-path "c:\temp" $_ }
$pFiles = @($files | % {join-path "c:\temp" $_ })