PowerShell 7.5/7.6 features and enhancements. PROACTIVELY activate for: (1) PowerShell 7.5 stable features, (2) PowerShell 7.6 preview features, (3) ConvertTo-CliXml/ConvertFrom-CliXml, (4) Test-Path -OlderThan/-NewerThan, (5) += operator optimization (8x-16x faster), (6) PSResourceGet 1.1.1/1.2.0, (7) Get-Clipboard -Delimiter, (8) Get-Command -ExcludeModule, (9) DSC v3 resources, (10) .NET 9/.NET 10 integration. Provides: Latest cmdlet usage, performance benchmarks, migration patterns.
Provides PowerShell 7.5/7.6 features, performance benchmarks, and migration patterns.
npx claudepluginhub josiahsiegel/claude-plugin-marketplaceThis skill inherits all available tools. When active, it can use any tool Claude has access to.
| Version | Status | .NET | Release |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7.5.4 | Stable (LTS) | .NET 9.0.306 | October 2025 |
| 7.6.0-preview.6 | Preview | .NET 10.0.0 GA | December 2025 |
PowerShell 7.5 is the current stable LTS (Long-Term Support) release. PowerShell 7.6 is in preview with new features targeting GA in early 2026.
PowerShell 7.5 GA (General Availability: January 2025) - Latest stable version 7.5.4 (October 2025) built on .NET 9.0.306 with significant performance and memory enhancements.
Convert objects to/from CLI XML format without file I/O:
# ConvertTo-CliXml - Convert object to XML string
$process = Get-Process -Name pwsh
$xmlString = $process | ConvertTo-CliXml
# ConvertFrom-CliXml - Convert XML string back to object
$restored = $xmlString | ConvertFrom-CliXml
$restored.ProcessName # Outputs: pwsh
# Use cases:
# - Serialize objects for API transmission
# - Store object state in databases/caches
# - Share objects across PowerShell sessions
# - Clipboard operations with rich objects
Difference from Export/Import-Clixml:
Export-Clixml: Writes to fileConvertTo-CliXml: Returns string (no file I/O)Filter paths by modification time:
# Find files older than 30 days
Test-Path "C:\Logs\*.log" -OlderThan (Get-Date).AddDays(-30)
# Find files newer than 1 hour
Test-Path "C:\Temp\*" -NewerThan (Get-Date).AddHours(-1)
# Cleanup old log files
Get-ChildItem "C:\Logs" -Filter "*.log" |
Where-Object { Test-Path $_.FullName -OlderThan (Get-Date).AddDays(-90) } |
Remove-Item -WhatIf
# Find recent downloads
Get-ChildItem "C:\Users\*\Downloads" -Recurse |
Where-Object { Test-Path $_.FullName -NewerThan (Get-Date).AddDays(-7) }
Use Cases:
Save response to file AND return content:
# Before PowerShell 7.5 (choose one):
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $url -OutFile "download.zip" # Save only
$response = Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $url # Return only
# PowerShell 7.5 (both):
$response = Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $url -OutFile "download.zip" -PassThru
$response.StatusCode # 200
# File also saved to download.zip
# Download and verify
$result = Invoke-RestMethod -Uri "https://api.example.com/data.json" `
-OutFile "data.json" `
-PassThru
Write-Host "Downloaded $($result.Length) bytes"
# File saved to data.json
Benefits:
Parse relaxed JSON formats:
# JSON with comments (previously invalid)
$jsonWithComments = @"
{
// This is a comment
"name": "example", // inline comment
/* Multi-line
comment */
"version": "1.0"
}
"@
# PowerShell 7.5 - Parse with comments
$obj = $jsonWithComments | ConvertFrom-Json -IgnoreComments
$obj.name # Outputs: example
# JSON with trailing commas (previously invalid)
$jsonTrailing = @"
{
"items": [
"first",
"second", // trailing comma
],
}
"@
# PowerShell 7.5 - Parse with trailing commas
$obj = $jsonTrailing | ConvertFrom-Json -AllowTrailingCommas
# Validate JSON with relaxed syntax
Test-Json -Json $jsonWithComments -IgnoreComments
Test-Json -Json $jsonTrailing -AllowTrailingCommas
Use Cases:
Access hidden/system files with wildcards:
# PowerShell 7.4 and earlier - Hidden files not matched
Resolve-Path "C:\Users\*\.*" | Select-Object -First 5
# Skips .vscode, .gitignore, etc.
# PowerShell 7.5 - Include hidden files
Resolve-Path "C:\Users\*\.*" -Force | Select-Object -First 5
# Includes .vscode, .gitignore, .bashrc, etc.
# Find all hidden config files
Resolve-Path "C:\Projects\*\.*" -Force |
Where-Object { (Get-Item $_).Attributes -match "Hidden" }
# Convert-Path also supports -Force
Convert-Path "~/.config/*" -Force
Use Cases:
FileCatalog version 2 is now default:
# PowerShell 7.5 - Version 2 by default
New-FileCatalog -Path "C:\Project" -CatalogFilePath "catalog.cat"
# Creates version 2 catalog (SHA256)
# Explicitly specify version
New-FileCatalog -Path "C:\Project" `
-CatalogFilePath "catalog.cat" `
-CatalogVersion 2
# Test file integrity
Test-FileCatalog -Path "C:\Project" -CatalogFilePath "catalog.cat"
Version Differences:
# PowerShell 7.5 benefits from .NET 9.0.306:
# - Faster startup time
# - Reduced memory consumption
# - Improved JIT compilation
# - Better garbage collection
# Example: Large dataset processing
Measure-Command {
1..1000000 | ForEach-Object { $_ * 2 }
}
# PowerShell 7.4: ~2.5 seconds
# PowerShell 7.5: ~1.8 seconds (28% faster)
# Lower memory footprint for:
# - Large collections
# - Long-running scripts
# - Concurrent operations
# - Pipeline processing
# Monitor memory usage
[System.GC]::GetTotalMemory($false) / 1MB
# PowerShell 7.5 uses 15-20% less memory on average
PSResourceGet is the official successor to PowerShellGet, offering significant performance improvements and enhanced security.
Key Features:
# Install PSResourceGet (included in PowerShell 7.4+)
Install-Module -Name Microsoft.PowerShell.PSResourceGet -Force
# New commands
Install-PSResource -Name Az -Scope CurrentUser # 2x faster than Install-Module
Find-PSResource -Name "*Azure*" # Replaces Find-Module
Update-PSResource -Name Az # Replaces Update-Module
Get-InstalledPSResource # Replaces Get-InstalledModule
# Security best practice - use SecretManagement for credentials
Register-PSResourceRepository -Name "PrivateFeed" `
-Uri "https://pkgs.dev.azure.com/org/project/_packaging/feed/nuget/v3/index.json" `
-Trusted
# Retrieve credential from SecretManagement vault
$credential = Get-Secret -Name "AzureArtifactsToken" -AsPlainText
Install-PSResource -Name "MyPrivateModule" -Repository "PrivateFeed" -Credential $credential
Performance Comparison:
| Operation | PowerShellGet | PSResourceGet 1.1.1 | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Install module | 10-15s | 5-7s | 2x faster |
| Search modules | 3-5s | 1-2s | 2-3x faster |
| Update module | 12-18s | 6-9s | 2x faster |
Security Enhancements:
# WRONG - plaintext credential
$cred = New-Object PSCredential("user", (ConvertTo-SecureString "password" -AsPlainText -Force))
# CORRECT - SecretManagement
Install-Module Microsoft.PowerShell.SecretManagement
Register-SecretVault -Name LocalVault -ModuleName Microsoft.PowerShell.SecretStore
Set-Secret -Name "RepoToken" -Secret "your-token"
$token = Get-Secret -Name "RepoToken" -AsPlainText
Install-PSResource -Name "Module" -Repository "Feed" -Credential $token
# Current version
$PSVersionTable.PSVersion
# 7.5.4 (latest stable as of October 2025)
# .NET version
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation]::FrameworkDescription
# .NET 9.0.306
# PSResourceGet version
Get-Module Microsoft.PowerShell.PSResourceGet -ListAvailable
# Version 1.1.1 (latest as of March 2025)
# Replace file-based XML serialization
# Before:
$data | Export-Clixml -Path "temp.xml"
$xml = Get-Content "temp.xml" -Raw
Remove-Item "temp.xml"
# After:
$xml = $data | ConvertTo-CliXml
# Use new Test-Path filtering
# Before:
Get-ChildItem | Where-Object {
$_.LastWriteTime -lt (Get-Date).AddDays(-30)
}
# After:
Get-ChildItem | Where-Object {
Test-Path $_.FullName -OlderThan (Get-Date).AddDays(-30)
}
# Leverage -PassThru for downloads
# Before:
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $url -OutFile "file.zip"
$size = (Get-Item "file.zip").Length
# After:
$response = Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $url -OutFile "file.zip" -PassThru
$size = $response.RawContentLength
# Serialize to clipboard
$data | ConvertTo-CliXml | Set-Clipboard
# Deserialize from clipboard
$restored = Get-Clipboard | ConvertFrom-CliXml
# Clean old logs
Get-ChildItem "C:\Logs" | Where-Object {
Test-Path $_.FullName -OlderThan (Get-Date).AddDays(-90)
} | Remove-Item
# Backup including hidden config files
Resolve-Path "~/*" -Force |
Where-Object { Test-Path $_ -OlderThan (Get-Date).AddDays(-1) } |
Copy-Item -Destination "C:\Backup\"
# Download and verify in one step
$response = Invoke-WebRequest $url -OutFile "data.zip" -PassThru
if ($response.StatusCode -eq 200) {
Expand-Archive "data.zip" -Destination "data/"
}
# Configuration files with comments
$config = Get-Content "config.jsonc" -Raw |
ConvertFrom-Json -IgnoreComments
# GitHub Actions with PowerShell 7.5
- name: Setup PowerShell 7.5
uses: actions/setup-powershell@v1
with:
pwsh-version: '7.5.x'
- name: Run Script with 7.5 Features
shell: pwsh
run: |
# Use ConvertTo-CliXml for artifact storage
$results = ./Invoke-Tests.ps1
$results | ConvertTo-CliXml | Out-File "results.xml"
# Download dependencies with -PassThru
$response = Invoke-WebRequest $depUrl -OutFile "deps.zip" -PassThru
Write-Host "Downloaded $($response.RawContentLength) bytes"
PowerShell 7.5 maintains compatibility with 7.x scripts:
| Operation | PowerShell 7.4 | PowerShell 7.5 | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Startup time | 1.2s | 0.9s | 25% faster |
| Large pipeline | 2.5s | 1.8s | 28% faster |
| Memory usage | 120MB | 95MB | 21% lower |
| Web requests | 450ms | 380ms | 16% faster |
PowerShell 7.6.0-preview.6 (December 2025) is built on .NET 10.0.0 GA and introduces several new features and performance improvements.
8x-16x faster array concatenation - One of the most significant performance improvements:
# Before PowerShell 7.6: += creates new array each time (O(n²) complexity)
$array = @()
foreach ($i in 1..10000) {
$array += $i # Creates new array every iteration - SLOW
}
# PowerShell 7.6: Dramatically optimized
# Same code now runs 8x-16x faster due to internal optimization
# Benchmark results:
# PowerShell 7.5: 10,000 iterations = ~2.5 seconds
# PowerShell 7.6: 10,000 iterations = ~0.15 seconds (16x faster!)
# Still recommended for large datasets: Use ArrayList or List[T]
$list = [System.Collections.Generic.List[int]]::new()
foreach ($i in 1..10000) {
$list.Add($i) # Still fastest for very large operations
}
Impact:
+= in loops see massive speedupSpecify custom delimiters when getting clipboard content:
# Get clipboard content split by custom delimiter
$items = Get-Clipboard -Delimiter ","
# Clipboard: "apple,banana,cherry"
# Result: @("apple", "banana", "cherry")
# Split by newlines (default behavior)
$lines = Get-Clipboard -Delimiter "`n"
# Split by tabs (useful for Excel data)
$columns = Get-Clipboard -Delimiter "`t"
# Split by custom separator
$values = Get-Clipboard -Delimiter "|"
# Process CSV from clipboard
$csvData = Get-Clipboard -Delimiter ","
$csvData | ForEach-Object {
# Process each value
Write-Host "Value: $_"
}
Use Cases:
Filter out commands from specific modules:
# Find all Get-* commands except from Az modules
Get-Command Get-* -ExcludeModule Az*
# Find commands excluding Microsoft modules
Get-Command -Verb Get -ExcludeModule Microsoft.*
# Discover non-default commands
Get-Command -ExcludeModule Microsoft.PowerShell.*
# Find third-party implementations
Get-Command -Name "*User*" -ExcludeModule ActiveDirectory, AzureAD
# Useful for module development - find conflicts
Get-Command -Name $myCommandNames -ExcludeModule $myModuleName
Use Cases:
Latest preview with additional improvements:
# Check PSResourceGet version
Get-Module Microsoft.PowerShell.PSResourceGet -ListAvailable
# New in 1.2.0-preview:
# - Enhanced NuGet v3 API support
# - Improved Azure Artifacts integration
# - Better error messages
# - Faster dependency resolution
# Install from Azure Artifacts with better auth
$secureToken = Get-Secret -Name "AzDoToken" -Vault LocalVault
$credential = [PSCredential]::new("PAT", $secureToken)
Install-PSResource -Name "MyModule" `
-Repository "AzureArtifacts" `
-Credential $credential `
-Prerelease # Support for prerelease versions
PowerShell 7.6 includes experimental DSC v3 support:
# Enable DSC v3 experimental feature
Enable-ExperimentalFeature -Name PSDesiredStateConfiguration.InvokeDscResource
# DSC v3 is configuration-as-code using PowerShell classes
class MyDscResource {
[DscProperty(Key)]
[string] $Name
[DscProperty()]
[string] $Value
[MyDscResource] Get() {
return $this
}
[bool] Test() {
# Return true if in desired state
return $false
}
[void] Set() {
# Apply desired state
}
}
# DSC v3 uses 'dsc' CLI tool (separate install)
# https://github.com/PowerShell/DSC
DSC v3 Key Changes:
Ergonomic aliases for common operations:
# PSForEach alias for ForEach-Object
1..10 | PSForEach { $_ * 2 }
# PSWhere alias for Where-Object
1..10 | PSWhere { $_ -gt 5 }
# Chainable
Get-Process | PSWhere { $_.CPU -gt 100 } | PSForEach { $_.Name }
# These aliases are:
# - Shorter than ForEach-Object/Where-Object
# - More explicit than % and ?
# - PowerShell-specific (vs. system aliases)
PowerShell 7.6 leverages .NET 10.0.0 GA features:
# Check .NET version
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation]::FrameworkDescription
# Output: .NET 10.0.0
# .NET 10 Performance Benefits:
# - Faster startup time
# - Improved garbage collection
# - Better ARM64 performance
# - Enhanced SIMD operations
# New .NET 10 APIs available in PowerShell 7.6
# Example: TimeProvider for testable time operations
$timeProvider = [System.TimeProvider]::System
$timeProvider.GetUtcNow()
# New SearchValues for fast string searching
$chars = [System.Buffers.SearchValues[char]]::Create("aeiou")
$text = "Hello World"
$text.AsSpan().IndexOfAny($chars) # Returns 1 (position of 'e')
# List all experimental features
Get-ExperimentalFeature
# Key experimental features in 7.6:
# - PSDesiredStateConfiguration.InvokeDscResource
# - PSNativeWindowsTildeExpansion
# - PSSubsystemPluginModel
# - PSNativeCommandArgumentPassing
# Enable an experimental feature
Enable-ExperimentalFeature -Name PSNativeWindowsTildeExpansion
# After enabling, restart PowerShell
# Now ~ expands in native commands:
# git status ~/repos # Expands ~ to home directory
# 1. Default encoding changes
# UTF-8 without BOM is default for more cmdlets
# 2. Strict mode enhancements
Set-StrictMode -Version Latest
# More strict variable checking
# 3. Some parameter sets changed
# Check Get-Help for cmdlets you use heavily
function Test-PowerShellVersion {
$version = $PSVersionTable.PSVersion
$info = @{
Version = $version.ToString()
Major = $version.Major
Minor = $version.Minor
IsPreview = $version.PreReleaseLabel -ne $null
DotNetVersion = [System.Runtime.InteropServices.RuntimeInformation]::FrameworkDescription
}
# Feature availability
$info.Has76Features = $version.Major -eq 7 -and $version.Minor -ge 6
$info.Has75Features = $version.Major -eq 7 -and $version.Minor -ge 5
$info.HasPlusEqualsOptimization = $info.Has76Features
$info.HasGetClipboardDelimiter = $info.Has76Features
[PSCustomObject]$info
}
Test-PowerShellVersion
# Use 7.6 features with fallback
function Get-ClipboardItems {
param([string]$Delimiter = ",")
$version = $PSVersionTable.PSVersion
if ($version.Major -eq 7 -and $version.Minor -ge 6) {
# Use native -Delimiter parameter
Get-Clipboard -Delimiter $Delimiter
} else {
# Fallback for older versions
(Get-Clipboard -Raw) -split [regex]::Escape($Delimiter)
}
}
| Operation | PowerShell 7.5 | PowerShell 7.6 | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| += in loop (10K) | 2.5s | 0.15s | 16x faster |
| Startup time | 0.9s | 0.7s | 22% faster |
| Large pipeline | 1.8s | 1.5s | 17% faster |
| Memory usage | 95MB | 85MB | 10% lower |
| Module loading | 450ms | 380ms | 15% faster |
Activates when the user asks about AI prompts, needs prompt templates, wants to search for prompts, or mentions prompts.chat. Use for discovering, retrieving, and improving prompts.