TOPIC
about_join
SHORT DESCRIPTION
Describes how the join operator (-join) combines multiple strings into a
single string.
LONG DESCRIPTION
The join operator concatenates a set of strings into a single string. The
strings are appended to the resulting string in the order that they appear
in the command.
Syntax
The following diagram shows the syntax for the join operator.
-Join <String[]>
<String[]> -Join <Delimiter>
Parameters
String[]
Specifies one or more strings to be joined.
Delimiter
Specifies one or more characters placed between the concatenated strings.
The default is no delimiter (“”).
Remarks
The unary join operator (-join <string[]>) has higher precedence than
a comma. As a result, if you submit a comma-separated list of strings to
the unary join operator, only the first string (before the first comma)
is submitted to the join operator.
To use the unary join operator, enclose the strings in parentheses, or
store the strings in a Variable, and then submit the Variable to join.
For example:
-join “a”, “b”, “c”
a
b
c
-join (“a”, “b”, “c”)
abc
$z = “a”, “b”, “c”
-join $z
abc
Examples
The following statement joins three strings:
-join (“Windows”, “PowerShell”, “2.0”)
WindowsPowerShell2.0
The following statement joins three strings delimited by a space:
“Windows”, “PowerShell”, “2.0” -join ” ”
Windows PowerShell 2.0
The following statements use a multiple-character delimiter to join
three strings:
$a = “WIND”, “SP”, “ERSHELL”
$a -join “OW”
WINDOWSPOWERSHELL
The following statement joins the lines in a here-string into
a single string. Because a here-string is one string, the lines in the
here-string must be split before they can be joined. You can use this
method to rejoin the strings in an XML file that has been saved in a
here-string:
$a = @’
a
b
c
‘@
(-split $a) -join ” ”
a b c
SEE ALSO
about_operators
about_Comparison_Operators
about_split