Welcome tag moderator AKA Unofficial DEV cheerleader. While most of my friends are found on SnapChat or Tic-Toc, you can find me here. And I OOP, but Iām not a VSCO girl.
Thanks. I've tried both PowerShell consoles and use the ISE for debugging scripts. Newer means "new to me". (I've been around less than 2 decades myself) š
From humble beginnings at an MSP, I've adventured through life as a sysadmin, into an engineer, and finally landed as a developer focused on fixing problems with automation.
It also gets confusing when talking about consoles vs terminals vs shells vs emulators, the list goes on, especially on Windows. In the brief experiments I've had on Linux, I really enjoyed using zsh, but powershell has the most "natural" learning experience to me (and is cross-platform with PowerShell Core and next year, PowerShell 7 and beyond).
On the vein of bash v. powershell, I ran across this article that kind of melds the two by making those Linux commands natively available through a powershell cmdlet-like experience:
Thanks. I've tried both PowerShell consoles and use the ISE for debugging scripts.
Newer means "new to me". (I've been around less than 2 decades myself) š
It also gets confusing when talking about consoles vs terminals vs shells vs emulators, the list goes on, especially on Windows. In the brief experiments I've had on Linux, I really enjoyed using
zsh
, but powershell has the most "natural" learning experience to me (and is cross-platform with PowerShell Core and next year, PowerShell 7 and beyond).On the vein of bash v. powershell, I ran across this article that kind of melds the two by making those Linux commands natively available through a powershell cmdlet-like experience:
devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline...