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PowerShell for Office 365

You're reading from   PowerShell for Office 365 Automate Office 365 administrative tasks

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787127999
Length 222 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Prashant G Bhoyar Prashant G Bhoyar
Author Profile Icon Prashant G Bhoyar
Prashant G Bhoyar
Martin Machado Martin Machado
Author Profile Icon Martin Machado
Martin Machado
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. PowerShell Fundamentals FREE CHAPTER 2. Managing Office 365 with PowerShell 3. Azure AD and Licensing Management 4. Managing SharePoint Online Using PowerShell 5. Managing Exchange Online Using PowerShell 6. Script Automation 7. Patterns and Practices PowerShell 8. OneDrive for Business 9. PowerShell Core

Using the for and while loops

Loops in PowerShell execute a series of commands or cmdlets as long as the condition to run them is true. Loops are helpful for running repetitive tasks inside a PowerShell script. For example, if we need to create five new users, we can use a loop, and inside the loop, we can add the logic to create a new user and execute the loop five times. Loops allow us to write business logic once and then run it repetitively as long as a certain condition is met. To implement loops in PowerShell, we can use the for, foreach, while, do...while, and do...until loops.

In a for loop, we run the command block based on a conditional test. In the following for loop, we are running Write-Host until the value of variable $i is less than 5. In the beginning, the value of variable $i is 0, and every time the loop is executed, we are incrementing the value of $i by 1. During the execution of the loop, when the value of variable $i becomes 5, the loop stops executing:

for ( $i=0; $i -lt 5; $i++)
{
Write-Host "Value of i is" $i
}

The output of this for loop is as follows:

Using the while, do...while, and do...until loops, we can run loops as long as a condition is true (it is met).

The while loops only use the while keyword, followed by the condition and then the script block, as shown here:

$i=1
while ($i -le 10)
{
Write-Host "Value of i is" $i
$i++
}

In this script, the script block inside the while loop will run till the value of the variable $i is less than 10. The output of this while loop is as follows:

The do...while and do...until loops begin with the do keyword, followed by the script block and then by the conditional keyword and the condition.

Here's an example of the do...while loop:

$i=1
do
{
Write-Host "Value of i is" $i
$i++
}
while ($i -le 10)

Here's an example of the do...until loop:

$i=1
do
{
Write-Host "Value of i is" $i
$i++
}
until ($i -gt 10)

Both the examples mentioned here basically implement the same business logic using loops, with slightly different comparison methods. In the do...while loop, the script block will run until the value of the variable $i is less than 10, and in the do...until loop, the script block will run until the value of the variable $i becomes greater than 10. The output of both the loops will be the same as, shown here:

You have been reading a chapter from
PowerShell for Office 365
Published in: Jul 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781787127999
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