In my last post I used used New-Object to create an desirable output when the “Get-Mailbox” cmdlet didn’t meet my needs. If your eyes glazed over trying to read the script, let me make it a bit simpler by focusing on a straight forward example.

Say you need to create a list of user’s mailbox size with their email address. This sounds like a simple request, but what you’d soon find is that mailbox sizes are returned with the Get-MailboxStatistics cmdlet and the email address is not. For that, you need to use another cmdlet, such as Get-Mailbox.

With the New-Object cmdlet, we are able to make a custom output that contains data from essentially wherever we want.

See this example:

$MyObject = New-Object PSObject -Property @{ EmailAddress = $null MailboxSize = $null }

In this example, I have created a new object with 2 fields, and saved it as the $MyObject variable.

For now, we’ve set the data to null, as shown below:

The next step is to populate each of those fields. We can write to them one at a time with lines like this:

$MyObject.EmailAddress = (Get-Mailbox mcrowley).PrimarySmtpAddress $MyObject.MailboxSize = (Get-MailboxStatistics mcrowley).TotalItemSize

Note: The variable we want to populate is on the left, with what we want to put in it on the right.

To confirm our results, we can simply type the variable name at the prompt:

Pretty cool, huh?

Ok, so now about that list. My example only shows the data for mcrowley, and you probably need more than just 1 item in your report, right?

For this, you need to use the foreach loop. You can read more about foreach here, but the actual code for our list is as follows:

(I am actually going to skip the $null attribute step here)

$UserList = Get-mailbox -Resultsize unlimited $MasterList = @() foreach ($User in $UserList) { $MyObject = New-Object PSObject -Property @{ EmailAddress = (Get-Mailbox $User).PrimarySmtpAddress MailboxSize = (Get-MailboxStatistics $User).TotalItemSize } $MasterList += $MyObject } $MasterList

Finally, if you wanted to make this run faster, we really don’t need to run “get-mailbox” twice. For better results, replace the line:

EmailAddress = (Get-Mailbox $User).PrimarySmtpAddress

With this one:

EmailAddress = $User.PrimarySmtpAddress