#PSTip Converting a String to a System.DateTime object
In a perfect world all date and time data available are represented by System.DateTime objects. In the real world we are usually not that lucky.
Read MoreIn a perfect world all date and time data available are represented by System.DateTime objects. In the real world we are usually not that lucky.
Read MoreNote: This tip requires PowerShell 3.0 or above. One of the new features introduced in PowerShell 4.0 is the collection filtering by using a method syntax.
Read MoreHow do you turn ‘20130701’ to ‘2013-07-01’? There are many ways to tackle this, breaking it into pieces (substring) and joining it back with a dash, use some regex fu to manipulate it, parse it as a DateTime and format it and so on.
Read MoreNote: This tip requires PowerShell 4.0 or above. PowerShell enables you to refer to a property of an object in a dynamic fashion:
Read MoreNote: This tip requires PowerShell 2.0 or above. The Disable-ADAccount cmdlet disables an Active Directory user, computer, or service account. When you need to disable multiple accounts you might find yourself trying something obvious like:
Read MoreNote: This tip requires PowerShell 2.0 or above. In PowerShell, it is possible to use GUI elements to request user input.
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