Moving Escape chars section to string section

This commit is contained in:
Andrew Ryan Davis 2020-08-20 00:11:48 -07:00
parent fc9b23f357
commit a1b13e3757

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@ -149,6 +149,18 @@ $age = 22
"{0} said he is {1} years old." -f $name, $age # => "Steve said he is 22 years old"
"$name's name is $($name.Length) characters long." # => "Steve's name is 5 characters long."
# Escape Characters in Powershell
# Many languages use the '\', but Windows uses this character for
# file paths. Powershell thus uses '`' to escape characters
# Take caution when working with files, as '`' is a
# valid character in NTFS filenames.
"Showing`nEscape Chars" # => new line between Showing and Escape
"Making`tTables`tWith`tTabs" # => Format things with tabs
# Negate pound sign to prevent comment
# Note that the function of '#' is removed, but '#" is still present
`#Get-Process # => Fail: not a recognized cmdlet
# $null is not an object
$null # => None
@ -709,19 +721,6 @@ $x=1
.{$x=2};$x # => 2
# Escape Characters in Powershell
# Many languages use the '\', but Windows uses this character for
# file paths. Powershell thus uses '`' to escape characters
# Take caution when working with files, as '`' is a
# valid character in NTFS filenames.
"Showing`nEscape Chars" # => new line between Showing and Escape
"Making`tTables`tWith`tTabs" # +> Format things with tabs
# Negate pound sign to prevent comment
# Note that the function of '#' is removed, but '#" is still present
`#Get-Process # => Fail: not a recognized cmdlet
# Remoting into computers is easy
Enter-PSSession -ComputerName RemoteComputer