When dealing with some of the more interesting .NET code classes, and also in regular PowerShell use, one often finds that we can come to a point where we feel as though we need half a dozen parameter sets, just to handle the different ways that a user might want to input rather important parameters for our functions. Thankfully, PowerShell has a very effective answer for this: [System.Management.Automation.ArgumentTransformationAttribute] .

How It Works

A simple breakdown of how this feature can be implemented to great effect is as follows:

Define your parameter type. For example's sake, I'll use System.Drawing.Size as I've been using it for that recently.

For example's sake, I'll use as I've been using it for that recently. Determine what types of input you'd like to accept. For me, I'd like to allow users to input ordinary integers as well as specific string formats for sizes, e.g. 4096 , 1920x1080 , 1080p .

For me, I'd like to allow users to input ordinary integers as well as specific string formats for sizes, e.g. , , . Create a new class that inherits System.Management.Automation.ArgumentTransformationAttribute .

that inherits . Define the allowable transformations by implementing the [object] Transform([EngineIntrinsics]$engineIntrinsics, [object] $inputData) { } method in your class.

A Thorough Example

So, let's take a look at what we can do to work out how to translate a string or perhaps an integer into a System.Drawing.Size object. I would like to allow users to input any of the following:

Any arbitrary integer (within reason); this would be used as both Width and Height values. A well-formatted string; 1000x1000 — two numbers separated only by an x that will be used as width and height, respectively. A predetermined resolution size; e.g., 1080p or 720p . An actual Size or SizeF object.

So, what we really need here is to implement a switch statement that checks the input type and then handles the input accordingly. This will effectively step in and let PowerShell know how we want our input handled, when we apply the attribute to a parameter.

A Basic Function

First, let's look at a simple function that will let us check the input and how it's getting handled, or just throw parameter binding errors when that fails.

using namespace System.Drawing $Assembly = if ( $PSEdition -eq 'Core' ) { 'System.Drawing.Common' } else { 'System.Drawing' } Add-Type -AssemblyName $Assembly function Test-SizeInput { [ CmdletBinding ()] param ( [ Parameter ( Mandatory )] [ Size ] $Size ) Write-Host "The size is $Size ." }

If you try to input anything other than a valid Size object, there's a good chance it'll simply be rejected out-of-hand. The built-in argument transformation code paths aren't really designed to do what we want them to.

The ArgumentTransformationAttribute Implementation

Now let's take a look at creating a transformation attribute.

using namespace System.Drawing using namespace System.Management.Automation $Assembly = if ( $PSEdition -eq 'Core' ) { 'System.Drawing.Common' } else { 'System.Drawing' } Add-Type -AssemblyName $Assembly # Inherit the base transformation attribute class SizeTransformAttribute : ArgumentTransformationAttribute { # Implement the Transform() method [ object ] Transform ([ EngineIntrinsics ] $engineIntrinsics , [ object ] $input Data ) { <# The parameter value(s) are passed in here as $inputData. We aren't accepting array input for our function, but it's good to make these fairly versatile where possible, so that you can reuse them easily! #> $outputData = switch ( $input Data ) { { $_ -is [ Size ] } { # Handle direct Size input $_ } { $_ -is [ SizeF ] } { # We don't want SizeF exactly, but it can be easily converted to Size $_ . ToSize () } { $_ -is [ int ] } { # Use input data as both width and height parameters [ Size ]:: new ( $_ , $_ ) } { $_ -is [ string ] } { <# Most input that doesn't come in as either a number or a complete object will be read as string input, so we need to check what's actually being input. #> if ( $_ -in [ SizeTransformAttribute ]:: PredefinedSizes.Keys ) { # If we encounter a predefined input size string, we can just get the size back [ SizeTransformAttribute ]:: PredefinedSizes [ $_ ] } elseif ( $_ -match '(?<Width>[0-9,]+)x(?<Height>[0-9,]+)' ) { # If we can regex match the string for a width and height, make the Size object [ Size ]:: new ( $Matches [ 'Width' ], $Matches [ 'Height' ]) } else { # Unrecognised string; throw an exception. throw [ ArgumentTransformationMetadataException ]:: new ( "Input string ' $_ ' could not be converted to a valid Size object." ) } } default { # If we hit something we can't convert, throw an exception throw [ ArgumentTransformationMetadataException ]:: new ( "Could not convert input ' $_ ' to a valid Size object." ) } } <# Now that we have one or more output Size objects, I'd like to validate that they're within reasonable limits; System.Drawing.Graphics and System.Drawing.Image only really support working with images up to just over 20,000x20,000 (400,000,000 pixels total) so we can validate based on that. #> foreach ( $Size in $OutputData ) { $Area = $Size . Width * $Size . Height if ( $Area -gt 20000 * 20000 ) { throw [ ArgumentTransformationMetadataException ]:: new ( "The size value ' $Size ' is larger than can be handled for Image or Graphics." ) } } <# If nothing throws alarm bells, hand back the output data, which will contain one or more Size objects. #> return $OutputData } # Define our standard set of input strings static [ hashtable ] $PredefinedSizes = @{ '4K' = [ Size ]:: new ( 4096 , 2160 ) '1080p' = [ Size ]:: new ( 1920 , 1080 ) '720p' = [ Size ]:: new ( 1280 , 720 ) } } function Test-SizeInput { [ CmdletBinding ()] param ( [ Parameter ( Mandatory )] # Add your attribute by name as a parameter attribute, like any other. [ SizeTransformAttribute ()] [ Size ] $Size ) Write-Host "The size is $Size ." }

That seems like a fair bit of code, really, but in effect it's just a big switch statement that tells PowerShell how to handle otherwise impossible to parse input. This approach allows you to use standard .NET classes when working in your function, and offload the messy work of parsing easy-to-write input to a helper class, which is invaluable when dealing with a more complex class.

Rather than needing a whole other parameter set to handle the different input style, you can keep your function's parameters nice and tidy, and simply list in your parameter's help section the various types of input formats that the parameter can accept. This allows users to easily input whatever value(s) they wish, without having to figure out exactly how to create a properly-formed object themselves.

Alternatives

Realistically, the only comparable method here is to create your own parameter type as a class in and of itself. I personally do not like the way this ends up hiding the underlying "true" parameter type. When users check the help, instead of a class name they could easily look up, they see an unfamiliar class name that may or may not have any available online documentation, let alone any readily available comment-based help!

As a result, this tends to lead to more complex and hard to work with functions — in my opinion. I know of several successful modules that prefer this alternative solution, and while I am sure it too has its advantages, I prefer not to expose types from a module wherever possible, as frequently it is difficult to handle them directly. I am of the opinion that such implementation details should be hidden to the user except as footnotes that inform them that alternate modes of input are acceptable for affected parameters.

Thank you for reading!