Trusted answers to developer questions

How to create an object of a class in PowerShell

Get the Learn to Code Starter Pack

Break into tech with the logic & computer science skills you’d learn in a bootcamp or university — at a fraction of the cost. Educative's hand-on curriculum is perfect for new learners hoping to launch a career.

PowerShell supports Object-Oriented Programming (OOP). This means we can define classes and instantiate objects of those classes to use in our code.

Before we can instantiate objects, we need to define a class.

Steps to creating and using objects

Defining a class

A class is a user-defined type created with the keyword class followed by its specified name. It may contain attributes that represent various properties of the class and methods used to give the class functionality.

Let’s start by creating a class Hero, which defines a superhero with several properties.

class Hero {
 
    [string]$realName
    [string]$heroName
    [string]$superPower
    [int32]$age
}

We have successfully defined the class. Now, we move towards giving our class some functionality by creating methods.

Creating methods

We will be creating a printDetails() function that will print the details of the hero. Then, we will define the constructors for our class.

class Hero {
 
    [string]$realName
    [string]$heroName
    [string]$superPower
    [int32]$age
 
    Hero () {}  # default constructor
    # overloaded constructor
    Hero ([string]$realName, [string]$heroName, [string]$superPower, [int32]$age)
    {
        $this.realName = $realName
        $this.heroName = $heroName
        $this.superPower = $superPower
        $this.age = $age
    } 
 
    [string] printDetails () # class method returning type string
    {
        
     return "$this.realName $this.heroName $this.age $this.superPower"
    }
}

Our class is now complete. We have defined both a default constructor and an overloaded constructor. We have also defined the printDetails() method that prints the hero’s details, separated by a space.

Note: Methods in PowerShell must return something.

Instantiating objects

We now move to the final phase: instantiating and using our Hero class object.

There are various ways of instantiating objects in PowerShell. We will be discussing the following:

  1. The New-Object cmdlet
  2. The new() default method

The New-Object cmdlet

New-Object is a keyword in PowerShell. The following is the syntax for instantiating an object using New-Object.

New-Object -Typename <ClassName> -ArgumentList <Constructor>

Specifically, for our Hero class, we use the overloaded constructor, and this becomes:

$myHero = New-Object -TypeName Hero -ArgumentList 'Bruce Banner',  'Hulk', 'Smash', 35

To use the default constructor, simply remove the ArgumentList.

The new() method

new() is a static method defined by default in every user-defined class. The following is the syntax for instantiating an object using the new() method.

[<ClassName>]::new(<Constructor>)

Specifically, for our Hero class, when we use the overloaded constructor, this becomes:

$myHero = [Hero]::new('Bruce Banner',  'Hulk', 'Smash', 35)

Using the same function without parameters will invoke the default constructor.

Finally, let’s use our instantiated object to call the printDetails() function.

$myHero = [Hero]::new('Bruce Banner',  'Hulk', 'Smash', 35)

$myhero.printDetails()

Output

Bruce Banner Hulk 35 Smash 

RELATED TAGS

powershell

CONTRIBUTOR

Khizar Hayat Saani
Copyright ©2024 Educative, Inc. All rights reserved
Did you find this helpful?