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PowerShell 7 Workshop

PowerShell 7 Workshop

By : Nick Parlow
3.7 (3)
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PowerShell 7 Workshop

PowerShell 7 Workshop

3.7 (3)
By: Nick Parlow

Overview of this book

Discover the capabilities of PowerShell 7 for your everyday tasks with this carefully paced tutorial that will help you master this versatile programming language. The first set of chapters will show you where to find and how to install the latest version of PowerShell, providing insights into the distinctive features that set PowerShell apart from other languages. You’ll then learn essential programming concepts such as variables and control flow, progressing to their applications. As you advance, you’ll work with files and APIs, writing scripts, functions, and modules. You’ll also gain proficiency in securing your PowerShell environment before venturing into different operating systems. Enriched with detailed practical examples tailored for Windows, Linux, macOS, and Raspberry Pi, each chapter weaves real-world scenarios to ignite your imagination and cement the principles you learn. You’ll be able to reinforce your understanding through self-assessment questions and delve deeper into the principles using comprehensive reading lists. By the end of this book, you’ll have the confidence to use PowerShell for physical computing and writing scripts for Windows administration.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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1
Part 1: PowerShell Fundamentals
9
Part 2: Scripting and Toolmaking
15
Part 3: Using PowerShell

Getting to grips with APIs

Most modern systems communicate between client and server using an API. This is a list of agreed requests and responses between the two components. This sounds complicated, but it is quite simple. If we put the https://random.dog/woof.json URL into a browser, we get back the URL of a random dog, from a database of dog images. We also get the size of the file, in bytes.

Our browser is the client, and it sends an HTTP GET request to an API endpoint (/woof.json) on the server at the https://random.dog URL. In response to this request, the server sends a message containing a URL back to us, in the first frame in the following figure. We can look at the headers in the second frame below and see that the content type is JSON. We can then display the URL in a browser to see a picture of an adorable dog, below. Note that I’m using Firefox, here, which allows us to see the headers as well as the content. Other browsers will only show the JSON content.

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