Today we shipped PowerShell 7 Preview5! This release contains a number of new features and many bug fixes from both the community as well as the PowerShell team. See the Release Notes for all the details of what is included in this release.

We are still on track to have one more preview release next month in November. Then, barring any quality concerns, a Release Candidate in December aligned with the .NET Core 3.1 final release. Finally, we expect General Availability of PowerShell 7 in January as our first Long Term Servicing release.

Between the Release Candidate and General Availability, we will only accept critical bug fixes and no new features will be included. For that release, some Experimental Features will be considered design stable and no longer be Experimental. This means that any future design changes for those features will be considered a breaking change.

New Features in Preview 5

This release has a number of new features from both the community as well as the PowerShell team. Remember that preview releases of PowerShell are installed side-by-side with stable versions so you can use both and provide us feedback on previews for bugs and also on experimental features.

You can read about new features in previous preview releases:

There were new features in Preview 1 and Preview 2, but I didn’t blog about them… sorry!

Chain operators

The new Pipeline Chain Operators allow conditional execution of commands depending on whether the previous command succeeded for failed. This works with both native commands as well as PowerShell cmdlets or functions. Prior to this feature, you could already do this by use of if statements along with checking if $? indicated that the last statement succeeded or failed. This new operator makes this simpler and consistent with other shells.

Null conditional operators for coalescing and assignment

Often in your scripts, you may need to check if a variable is $null or if a property is $null before using it. The new Null conditional operators makes this simpler.

The new ?? null coalescing operator removes the need for if and else statements if you want to get the value of a statement if it’s not $null or return something else if it is $null. Note that this doesn’t replace the check for a boolean value of true or false, it’s only checking if the returned value is $null.

The new ??= null conditional assignment operator makes it easy to assign a variable a value only if the variable value is $null.

New PowerShell version notification

Our telemetry available in our PowerBI Dashboard indicates some set of users are still using older versions (sometimes older previews of released stable versions!). This new feature will inform you on startup if a new preview version is available (if you are using a preview version) or if a new stable version is available to keep you up-to-date on the latest servicing release which may contain security fixes. Because this is new, you won’t see this in action until Preview 6 comes out.

More details of this feature including how to disable it in the Notification on Version Update RFC

Tab completion for variable assignment

This new feature will allow you to use tab completion on variable assignment and get allowed values for enums or variables with type constraints like [ValidateSet()] . This makes it easy to change $ErrorActionPreference or the new $ErrorView (detailed below) to valid values without having to type them out.

Format-Hex improved formatting

This improvement comes from Joel Sallow making Format-Hex more useful when viewing different types of objects in a pipeline as well as supporting viewing more types of objects.

Get-HotFix is back

The Get-HotFix cmdlet only works on Windows and will query the system on what patches have been installed. This was previously unavailable in PowerShell Core 6 because it depended on System.Management namespace which wasn’t available on .NET Core 2.x which PowerShell Core 6.x is built on. However, .NET Core 3.0 which PowerShell 7 is built on brought back this namespace (for Windows only) so we re-enabled this cmdlet.

There is a delay getting results in this example due to the number of patches I have on my Windows 7 VM.

Select-String adds emphasis

This was a HackIllinois project by Derek Xia that uses inverse colored text to highlight the text in a string that matches the selection criteria. There is an optional -NoEmphasis switch to suppress the emphasis.

ConciseView for errors

Some user feedback we’ve consistently received is about the amount of red text you get when you encounter an error in PowerShell.

The $ErrorView preference variable allows you to change the formatting of errors. Previously, it supported NormalView (the default) as well as a more terse CategoryView . This feature adds a ConciseView where most commands return just the relevant error message. In cases where there is additional contextual information in a script file or the location in a script block, you get the line number, the line of text in question, and a pointer to where the error occurred.

This new view is part of the Update Error View RFC so please provide feedback there!

Get-Error cmdlet

While ConciseView gives you more precise, but limited information on errors, we added a new cmdlet Get-Error to get much richer information on errors.

By default, just running Get-Error shows a formatted view of the most recent error including showing specific nested types like Exceptions and ErrorRecords making it easier to diagnose what went wrong.

This new cmdlet is part of the Update Error View RFC so please provide feedback there!

Closing

We have one more preview planned for November with a few more features coming from the PowerShell team as well as the PowerShell community!

Steve Lee PowerShell Team