名前 Group-Object 概要 Groups objects that contain the same value for specified properties. 構文 Group-Object [[-Property] []] [-AsHashTable] [-AsString] [-CaseSensitive] [-Culture []] [-Inform ationAction {SilentlyContinue | Stop | Continue | Inquire | Ignore | Suspend}] [-InformationVariable []] [-InputObject []] [-NoElement] [] 説明 The Group-Object cmdlet displays objects in groups based on the value of a specified property. Group-Object return s a table with one row for each property value and a column that displays the number of items with that value. If you specify more than one property, Group-Object first groups them by the values of the first property, and the n, within each property group, it groups by the value of the next property. パラメーター -AsHashTable [] Returns the group as a hash table. The keys of the hash table are the property values by which the objects ar e grouped. The values of the hash table are the objects that have that property value. By itself, the AsHashTable parameter returns each hash table in which each key is an instance of the grouped o bject. When used with the AsString parameter, the keys in the hash table are strings. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -AsString [] Converts the hash table keys to strings. By default, the hash table keys are instances of the grouped object. This parameter is valid only when used with the AsHashTable parameter. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -CaseSensitive [] Makes the grouping case-sensitive. Without this parameter, the property values of objects in a group might hav e different cases. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -Culture [] Specifies the culture to use when comparing strings. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -InformationAction [] By itself, the AsHashTable parameter returns each hash table in which each key is an instance of the grouped o bject. When used with the AsString parameter, the keys in the hash table are strings. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -InformationVariable [] By itself, the AsHashTable parameter returns each hash table in which each key is an instance of the grouped o bject. When used with the AsString parameter, the keys in the hash table are strings. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -InputObject [] Specifies the objects to group. Enter a variable that contains the objects, or type a command or expression th at gets the objects. When you use the InputObject parameter to submit a collection of objects to Group-Object, Group-Object receive s one object that represents the collection. As a result, it creates a single group with that object as its me mber. To group the objects in a collection, pipe the objects to Group-Object. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する true (ByValue) ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -NoElement [] Omits the members of a group from the results. 必須 false 位置 named 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false -Property [] Specifies the properties for grouping. The objects are arranged into groups based on the value of the specifie d property. The value of the Property parameter can be a new calculated property. To create a calculated, property, create a hash table with an Expression key that specifies a string or script block value. 必須 false 位置 1 既定値 none パイプライン入力を許可する false ワイルドカード文字を許可する false このコマンドレットは、次の共通パラメーターをサポートします: Verbose、 Debug、ErrorAction、ErrorVariable、WarningAction、WarningVariable、 OutBuffer, PipelineVariable、および OutVariable。詳細については、 about_CommonParameters (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=113216) を参照してください。 入力 System.Management.Automation.PSObject You can pipe any object to Group-Object 出力 Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.GroupInfo or System.Collections.Hashtable When you use the AsHashTable parameter, Group-Object returns a hash table. Otherwise, it returns a GroupInfo o bject. メモ You can also use the GroupBy parameter of the formatting cmdlets (such as Format-Table [m2] and Format-List [m 2]) to group objects. Unlike Group-Object, which creates a single table with a row for each property value, th e GroupBy parameters create a table for each property value with a row for each item that has the property val ue. Group-Object does not require that the objects being grouped be of the same Microsoft .NET Framework type. Whe n grouping objects of different .NET Framework types, Group-Object uses the following rules: -- Same Property Names and Types: If the objects have a property with the specified name, and the property val ues have the same .NET Framework type, the property values are grouped by using the same rules that would be u sed for objects of the same type. -- Same Property Names, Different Types: If the objects have a property with the specified name, but the prope rty values have a different .NET Framework type in different objects, Group-Object uses the .NET Framework typ e of the first occurrence of the property as the .NET Framework type for that property group. When an object h as a property with a different type, the property value is converted to the type for that group. If the type c onversion fails, the object is not included in the group. -- Missing Properties: Objects that do not have a specified property are considered ungroupable. Ungroupable o bjects appear in the final GroupInfo object output in a group named AutomationNull.Value. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 1 -------------------------- PS C:\>get-childitem *.doc | group-object -property length This command gets the files in the current location that have a .doc extension and groups them by size. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 2 -------------------------- PS C:\>get-childitem | sort-object -property extension | group-object -property extension This command gets the files in the current location, sorts them by file name extension, and then groups them by fi le name extension. Note that the files are sorted before they are grouped. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 3 -------------------------- PS C:\>1..35 | group-object -property {$_ % 2},{$_ % 3} This example shows how to use script blocks as the value of the Property parameter. This command displays the integers from 1 to 35, grouped by the remainder left when they are divided by 2 or 3. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 4 -------------------------- PS C:\>$events = get-eventlog -logname system -newest 1000 PS C:\>$events | group-object -property eventID Count Name Group ----- ---- ----- 44 Information {System.Diagnostics.EventLogEntry, 5 Error {System.Diagnostics.EventLogEntry, 1 Warning {System.Diagnostics.EventLogEntry} These commands display the 1,000 most recent entries in the System event log, grouped by Event ID. The first command uses the Get-EventLog cmdlet to retrieve the events and the assignment operator (=) to save them in the $events variable. The second command uses a pipeline operator (|) to send the events in the $events variable to the Group-Object cmd let. The command uses the Property parameter to specify that the events should be grouped according to the value o f their EventID property. In the output, the Count column represents the number of entries in each group, the Name column represents the Eve ntID values that define a group, and the Group column represents the objects in each group. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 5 -------------------------- PS C:\>get-process | group-object -property priorityclass Count Name Group ----- ---- ----- 55 Normal {System.Diagnostics.Process (AdtAgent), System.Diagnostics.Process (alg), System.Dia... 1 {System.Diagnostics.Process (Idle)} 3 High {System.Diagnostics.Process (Newproc), System.Diagnostics.Process (winlogon), System.D... 2 BelowNormal {System.Diagnostics.Process (winperf), PS C:\>get-process | group-object -property company -noelement Count Name ----- ---- 55 Normal 1 3 High 2 BelowNormal This example demonstrates the effect of the NoElement parameter. These commands group the processes on the compute r by priority class. The first command uses the Get-Process cmdlet to get the processes on the computer. It uses a pipeline operator (| ) to send the results to Group-Object, which groups the objects by the value of the PriorityClass property of the process. The second command is identical to the first, except that it uses the NoElement parameter to eliminate the members of the group from the output. The result is a table with only the count and property value name. The results are shown in the following sample output. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 6 -------------------------- PS C:\>get-eventlog -logname system -newest 1000 | group-object -property {$_.TimeWritten - $_.TimeGenerated} This command demonstrates how to provide the value of the Property parameter as a script block. This command displays the most recent 1,000 entries from the system event log, grouped according to the time betwe en when they were generated and when they were written to the log. The command uses the Get-EventLog cmdlet to get the event log entries. It uses a pipeline operator (|) to send the entries to the Group-Object cmdlet. The value of the Property parameter is specified as a script block (an expres sion in braces). The result of evaluating the script block is the time between when the log entry was generated an d when it was written to the log. That value is used to group the 1,000 most recent events. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 7 -------------------------- PS C:\>get-childitem | group-object extension -noelement Count Name ----- ---- 21 82 .txt 9 .cmd 5 .log 12 .xml 5 .htm 36 .ps1 1 .psc1 3 .exe 6 .csv 1 .psd1 2 .bat This command groups the items in the current directory by file name extension. It uses the NoElement parameter to omit the members of the group. The results are shown in the following sample output. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 8 -------------------------- PS C:\>"a", "b", "c", "c", "d" | get-unique a b c d PS C:\>"a", "b", "c", "c", "d" | group-object -noelement | where {$_.Count -gt 1} Count Name ----- ---- 2 c PS C:\>get-process | group-object -property Name -noelement | where {$_.count -gt 1} Count Name ----- ---- 2 csrss 5 svchost 2 winlogon 2 wmiprvse This example shows how to find the unique and non-unique (repeated) property values in a collection. The first command gets the unique elements of an array by piping the array to the Get-Unique cmdlet. The second command gets the non-unique elements of an array. It pipes the array to the Group-Object cmdlet, which groups the objects by value. The resulting groups are piped to the Where-Object cmdlet, which selects objects with groups with more than one member. The third command shows a practical use for this technique. It uses the same method to find processes on the compu ter that have the same process name. The results are shown in the following sample output. -------------------------- EXAMPLE 9 -------------------------- PS C:\>$a = get-command get-*, set-* -type cmdlet | group-object -property verb -ashashtable -asstring PS C:\>$a Name Value ---- ----- Get {Get-PSCallStack, Get-PSBreakpoint, Get-PSDrive, Get-PSSession...} Set {Set-Service, Set-StrictMode, Set-PSDebug, Set-PSSessionConfiguration...} PS C:\>$a.get CommandType Name Definition ----------- ---- ---------- Cmdlet Get-PSCallStack Get-PSCallStack [-Verbose] [-Debug] [-ErrorAction ] [-Verbose] [-Debug] [-ErrorA... Cmdlet Get-PSDrive Get-PSDrive [[-Name] ] [-Scope ] [-PSProvider... ... This example uses the AsHashTable and AsString parameters to return the groups in a hash table, that is, as a coll ection of key-value pairs. In the resulting hash table, each property value is a key, and the group elements are the values. Because each key is a property of the hash table object, you can use dot notation to display the values. The first command gets the Get and Set cmdlets in the session, groups them by verb, returns the groups as a hash t able, and saves the hash table in the $a variable. The second command displays the hash table in $a. There are two key-value pairs, one for the Get cmdlets and one f or the Set cmdlets. The third command uses dot notation to display the values of the Get key in $a. The values are CmdletInfo object. The AsString parameter does not convert the objects in the groups to strings. 関連するリンク Online Version: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?linkid=293980