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Prompt for user input in PowerShell

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powershell

People also ask

How do I prompt for user input in PowerShell?

Use the Read-Host to Prompt for User Input in PowerShell The -Prompt parameter is used to specify a text to provide the information about what to input. It appends a colon : to the text you enter. The Read-Host pauses execution and receives input. When a user enters the value at the prompt, it returns that same value.

How do I get the PowerShell prompt?

To get the Prompt function, use the Get-Command cmdlet or use the Get-Item cmdlet in the Function drive.

How do I change the PowerShell prompt?

Note: You can just paste the prompt function in powershell to change the prompt path instead of saving the function in your profile, but you will have to do this every time you launch powershell. You also need to run Powershell as admin and do Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned .

What is $? In PowerShell?

$? Contains the execution status of the last command. It contains True if the last command succeeded and False if it failed. For cmdlets and advanced functions that are run at multiple stages in a pipeline, for example in both process and end blocks, calling this.


Read-Host is a simple option for getting string input from a user.

$name = Read-Host 'What is your username?'

To hide passwords you can use:

$pass = Read-Host 'What is your password?' -AsSecureString

To convert the password to plain text:

[Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal]::PtrToStringAuto(
    [Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal]::SecureStringToBSTR($pass))

As for the type returned by $host.UI.Prompt(), if you run the code at the link posted in @Christian's comment, you can find out the return type by piping it to Get-Member (for example, $results | gm). The result is a Dictionary where the key is the name of a FieldDescription object used in the prompt. To access the result for the first prompt in the linked example you would type: $results['String Field'].

To access information without invoking a method, leave the parentheses off:

PS> $Host.UI.Prompt

MemberType          : Method
OverloadDefinitions : {System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary[string,psobject] Pr
                    ompt(string caption, string message, System.Collections.Ob
                    jectModel.Collection[System.Management.Automation.Host.Fie
                    ldDescription] descriptions)}
TypeNameOfValue     : System.Management.Automation.PSMethod
Value               : System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary[string,psobject] Pro
                    mpt(string caption, string message, System.Collections.Obj
                    ectModel.Collection[System.Management.Automation.Host.Fiel
                    dDescription] descriptions)
Name                : Prompt
IsInstance          : True

$Host.UI.Prompt.OverloadDefinitions will give you the definition(s) of the method. Each definition displays as <Return Type> <Method Name>(<Parameters>).


Using parameter binding is definitely the way to go here. Not only is it very quick to write (just add [Parameter(Mandatory=$true)] above your mandatory parameters), but it's also the only option that you won't hate yourself for later.

More below:

[Console]::ReadLine is explicitly forbidden by the FxCop rules for PowerShell. Why? Because it only works in PowerShell.exe, not PowerShell ISE, PowerGUI, etc.

Read-Host is, quite simply, bad form. Read-Host uncontrollably stops the script to prompt the user, which means that you can never have another script that includes the script that uses Read-Host.

You're trying to ask for parameters.

You should use the [Parameter(Mandatory=$true)] attribute, and correct typing, to ask for the parameters.

If you use this on a [SecureString], it will prompt for a password field. If you use this on a Credential type, ([Management.Automation.PSCredential]), the credentials dialog will pop up, if the parameter isn't there. A string will just become a plain old text box. If you add a HelpMessage to the parameter attribute (that is, [Parameter(Mandatory = $true, HelpMessage = 'New User Credentials')]) then it will become help text for the prompt.


Place this at the top of your script. It will cause the script to prompt the user for a password. The resulting password can then be used elsewhere in your script via $pw.

   Param(
     [Parameter(Mandatory=$true, Position=0, HelpMessage="Password?")]
     [SecureString]$password
   )

   $pw = [Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal]::PtrToStringAuto([Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal]::SecureStringToBSTR($password))

If you want to debug and see the value of the password you just read, use:

   write-host $pw

As an alternative, you could add it as a script parameter for input as part of script execution

 param(
      [Parameter(Mandatory = $True,valueFromPipeline=$true)][String] $value1,
      [Parameter(Mandatory = $True,valueFromPipeline=$true)][String] $value2
      )