![]() ![]() Throughout the development of 6.2, the PowerShell Core team has also been focused on supporting PowerShell Core 6 in Azure Functions (more on this soon!), automating our release process (blog coming!), the v1.18.0 release of PSScriptAnalyzer, the 2.0.0-Preview release of the PowerShell Visual Studio Code extension, and, of course, the PowerShell Core 6.2 release. The community is still contributing just over half of all incoming pull requests! Since the 6.1.0 release (September 2018), we’ve taken over 560 changes for the 6.2 release! That’s almost 4 changes a day (excluding weekends)! Of course, we have to thank our community for providing a significant portion of these improvements. To see a full list of improvements, check out our detailed changelogs on GitHub. The PowerShell Core 6.2 release is focused primarily on performance improvements, bug fixes, and smaller cmdlet/language enhancements that improve the quality of life for users. This means that you can continue to use Windows PowerShell for existing scripts while simultaneously using PowerShell Core for new automation or to explore its new capabilities. So How Do I Install It?įor info on installing PowerShell Core 6.2, check our installation docs.Ī reminder that PowerShell Core works side-by-side with Windows PowerShell, so you can use both independently of each other. ![]() Thanks to everyone that made this release possible, including our contributors, users, and anyone who filed issues and submitted feedback. ![]() This is the third minor supported release of PowerShell Core, the open-source edition of PowerShell that works on Linux, macOS, and Windows! We’re proud to announce that the latest version of PowerShell has been released! ![]()
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