Equivalent to C#'s "using" keyword in powershell?

.NetPowershellPowershell 2.0

.Net Problem Overview


When I use another object in the .net-Framework in C# I can save a lot of typing by using the using directive.

using FooCompany.Bar.Qux.Assembly.With.Ridiculous.Long.Namespace.I.Really.Mean.It;

...


  var blurb = new Thingamabob();

...

So is there a way in Powershell to do something similiar? I'm accessing a lot of .net objects and am not happy of having to type

 $blurb = new-object FooCompany.Bar.Qux.Assembly.With.Ridiculous.Long.Namespace.I.Really.Mean.It.Thingamabob;

all the time.

.Net Solutions


Solution 1 - .Net

There's really nothing at the namespace level like that. I often assign commonly used types to variables and then instantiate them:

$thingtype = [FooCompany.Bar.Qux.Assembly.With.Ridiculous.Long.Namespace.I.Really.Mean.It.Thingamabob];
$blurb = New-Object $thingtype.FullName

Probably not worth it if the type won't be used repeatedly, but I believe it's the best you can do.

Solution 2 - .Net

PowerShell 5.0 (included in WMF5 or Windows 10 and up), adds the using namespace construct to the language. You can use it in your script like so:

#Require -Version 5.0
using namespace FooCompany.Bar.Qux.Assembly.With.Ridiculous.Long.Namespace.I.Really.Mean.It
$blurb = [Thingamabob]::new()

(The #Require statement on the first line is not necessary to use using namespace, but it will prevent the script from running in PS 4.0 and below where using namespace is a syntax error.)

Solution 3 - .Net

Check out this blog post from a couple years ago: http://blogs.msdn.com/richardb/archive/2007/02/21/add-types-ps1-poor-man-s-using-for-powershell.aspx

Here is add-types.ps1, excerpted from that article:

param(
	[string] $assemblyName = $(throw 'assemblyName is required'),
	[object] $object
)

process {
	if ($_) {
		$object = $_
	}
	
	if (! $object) {
		throw 'must pass an -object parameter or pipe one in'
	}
	
	# load the required dll
	$assembly = [System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName($assemblyName)
	
	# add each type as a member property
	$assembly.GetTypes() | 
	where {$_.ispublic -and !$_.IsSubclassOf( [Exception] ) -and $_.name -notmatch "event"} | 
	foreach { 
		# avoid error messages in case it already exists
		if (! ($object | get-member $_.name)) {
			add-member noteproperty $_.name $_ -inputobject $object
		}
	}
}

And, to use it:

RICBERG470> $tfs | add-types "Microsoft.TeamFoundation.VersionControl.Client"
RICBERG470> $itemSpec = new-object $tfs.itemspec("$/foo", $tfs.RecursionType::none)

Basically what I do is crawl the assembly for nontrivial types, then write a "constructor" that uses Add-Member add them (in a structured way) to the objects I care about.

See also this followup post: http://richardberg.net/blog/?p=38

Solution 4 - .Net

this is just a joke, joke...

$fullnames = New-Object ( [System.Collections.Generic.List``1].MakeGenericType( [String]) );

function using ( $name ) { 
foreach ( $type in [Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName($name).GetTypes() )
    {
        $fullnames.Add($type.fullname);
    }
}

function new ( $name ) {
    $fullname = $fullnames -like "*.$name";
    return , (New-Object $fullname[0]);
}

using System.Windows.Forms
using FooCompany.Bar.Qux.Assembly.With.Ridiculous.Long.Namespace.I.Really.Mean.It
$a = new button
$b = new Thingamabob

Solution 5 - .Net

Here's some code that works in PowerShell 2.0 to add type aliases. But the problem is that it is not scoped. With some extra work you could "un-import" the namespaces, but this should get you off to a good start.

##############################################################################
#.SYNOPSIS
# Add a type accelerator to the current session.
#
#.DESCRIPTION
# The Add-TypeAccelerator function allows you to add a simple type accelerator
# (like [regex]) for a longer type (like [System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex]).
#
#.PARAMETER Name
# The short form accelerator should be just the name you want to use (without
# square brackets).
#
#.PARAMETER Type
# The type you want the accelerator to accelerate.
#
#.PARAMETER Force
# Overwrites any existing type alias.
#
#.EXAMPLE
# Add-TypeAccelerator List "System.Collections.Generic.List``1"
# $MyList = New-Object List[String]
##############################################################################
function Add-TypeAccelerator {
    
    [CmdletBinding()]
    param(

        [Parameter(Position=1,Mandatory=$true,ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName=$true)]
        [String[]]$Name,
   
        [Parameter(Position=2,Mandatory=$true,ValueFromPipeline=$true)]
        [Type]$Type,
        
        [Parameter()]
        [Switch]$Force
        
    )
    
    process {
    
        $TypeAccelerators = [Type]::GetType('System.Management.Automation.TypeAccelerators')
        
        foreach ($a in $Name) {
            if ( $TypeAccelerators::Get.ContainsKey($a) ) {
                if ( $Force ) {
                    $TypeAccelerators::Remove($a) | Out-Null
                    $TypeAccelerators::Add($a,$Type)
                }
                elseif ( $Type -ne $TypeAccelerators::Get[$a] ) {
                    Write-Error "$a is already mapped to $($TypeAccelerators::Get[$a])"
                }
            }
            else {
                $TypeAccelerators::Add($a, $Type)
            }
        }
        
    }

}

Solution 6 - .Net

If you just need to create an instance of your type, you can store the name of the long namespace in a string:

$st = "System.Text"
$sb = New-Object "$st.StringBuilder"

It's not as powerful as the using directive in C#, but at least it's very easy to use.

Solution 7 - .Net

Thanks everybody for your input. I've marked Richard Berg's contribution as an answer, because it most closely resembles what I'm looking for.

All your answers brought me on the track that seems most promising: In his blog post Keith Dahlby proposes a Get-Type commandlet that allows easy consutruction of types for generic methods.

I think there is no reason against exetending this to also search through a predefined path of assemblies for a type.

Disclaimer: I haven't built that -- yet ...

Here is how one could use it:

$path = (System.Collections.Generic, FooCompany.Bar.Qux.Assembly.With.Ridiculous.Long.Namespace.I.Really.Mean.It)

$type = get-type -Path $path List Thingamabob
$obj = new-object $type
$obj.GetType()

This would result in a nice generic List of Thingamabob. Of course I'd wrap up everthing sans the path definition in just another utility function. The extended get-type would include a step to resolve any given type agains the path.

Solution 8 - .Net

#Requires -Version 5
using namespace System.Management.Automation.Host
#using module

Solution 9 - .Net

I realize this is an old post, but I was looking for the same thing and came across this: http://weblogs.asp.net/adweigert/powershell-adding-the-using-statement

Edit: I suppose I should specify that it allows you to use the familiar syntax of...

using ($x = $y) { ... }

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questionfroh42View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - .NetdahlbykView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - .NetBrant BobbyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - .NetRichard BergView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - .NethogeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - .NetJoshView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - .NetbouvierrView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - .Netfroh42View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - .NetJaqueline VanekView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - .NethaliphaxView Answer on Stackoverflow