Format output as a list of object properties, each on a new line.
Syntax
Format-List [[-Property] Object[]] [-view string]
[-groupBy Object] [-force] [-inputObject psobject]
[-expand string] [-displayError]
[-showError] [CommonParameters]
key
-Property Object[]
The object properties to display (in order)
Wildcards are permitted.
You cannot use -Property and -View in the same command.
-view string
The name of an alternate format or "view."
You cannot use -Property and -View in the same command.
-groupBy Object
Format the output in groups based on a shared property or value.
-force
Override restrictions that prevent the command from succeeding,
without compromising security. Force will override read-only
attributes but will not change file permissions.
-inputObject psobject
The objects to format.
A variable, command or expression that gets the objects.
-expand string
Where string is either "EnumOnly" (the default), "CoreOnly" or "Both"
"CoreOnly" will format and display properties of the collection object itself,
while 'emumOnly' will enumerate and display the object properties.
(designed around the ICollection (System.Collections) interface.)
-displayError
Display errors at the command line.
-showError
Send errors through the pipeline.CommonParameters
The common parameters: -Verbose, -Debug,-ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable, -OutVariable.
CommonParameters:
-Verbose, -Debug, -ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable, -WarningAction, -WarningVariable,
-OutBuffer -OutVariable.
Standard Aliases for Format-List: fl
Format-Custom The value of -GroupBy or -Property can be a new calculated property. To create a calculated property, use a hash table. Valid keys are:
Name (or Label) string
Expression string or script block
FormatString string
Custom display formats can also be defined using XML tags see get-help about_Display.xml for details.
Examples
Print a list of running processes, incuding the process name and path:
PS C:\> get-process | format-list -property name, path
Print a list of running processes, incuding all the properties:
PS C:\> get-process | format-list -property *
Print the objects stored in $My_Variable in list format:
PS C:\> format-list -InputObject $My_Variable
“Knowledge is a process of piling up facts; wisdom lies in their simplification” ~ Martin Fischer
Related PowerShell Cmdlets:
format-custom - Format output using a customized view.
format-table - Format the output as a table.
format-wide - Format objects as a table of their properties.
out-file - Send command output to a file.
out-host - Send the pipelined output to the host.