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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 10th, 2023

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  • This blog does a fairly straight-forward job on explaining the basics. For me, I learn best in an interactive 1:1 or well-constructed video, so ChatGPT was priceless. I could ask it stupid questions all day long, and after throwing some different ideas around I started to see the essential parts and just let my prior knowledge of PS, .NET, and C# WPF take it from there.

    At the end of the day, all that really matters is using the PresentationFramework assembly and creating a window:

    • Add-Type -AssemblyName PresentationFramework
    • Either use Visual Studio > WPF Project and make the UI you want. Take the XAML file and use PowerShell to get the raw content:
      • $Xaml = Get-Content -Path MainWindow.xaml -Raw
      • $SanitizedXaml = $Xaml -replace “bad syntax e.g. Foreground={x:Null}” "Foreground=“Transparent” # Certain XAML syntax is incompatible with PS XML
      • [xml]$XmlReader = [System.Xml.XmlNodeReader]::new($SanitizedXaml)
      • $Window = [Windows.Markup.XamlReader]::Load($XmlReader)
    • Or, use .NET-style syntax in PS directly:
    • Then show the window:
      • $Window.ShowDialog() | Out-Null


  • Python is always something I intend to learn but never get around to. Does it natively handle GUI for process tooling or does it require a third party? What makes PowerShell so useful to me is the native ability to create visual applications without the need to compile. I can create tools for my company that launches right out of ConfigMgr Software Center and other technicians can contribute without needing a programming background.

    At home I want to mess around with tooling for home services without having to resort to web development.


  • By far it’s the object pipeline. Having structured data makes it easy to automate workflows in a predictable way. With bash everything is a string, so everything has to be parsed. It’s tedious.

    It took about a year of steady use before I came to enjoy the syntax. It shines in a production environment with other cooks in the kitchen. I never got into the C style, I like my code human readable at a glance. It’s fine if everyone’s a sage but we have a team with a mixture of skill levels and for me PowerShell gets it right.








  • I wanted to like it and I tried it over and over but I could not for the life of me get opensuse aeon or kalpa to work on my desktop when tumbleweed works perfectly. As soon as I installed the Nvidia drivers it went belly up and I couldn’t find help online.

    I’m still new to Linux so I’ll accept that I need more experience but I can’t help but feel like a degree in computer science is a recommended prereq for this stuff since there just doesn’t seem to be solid documentation to get you through it.

    That experience made me take microos off my server and put in proxmox instead.










  • Oh I am so glad you’re ok. The second you called for a trigger warning my heart just reached right on out for you. I was saying to myself out loud, “oh no, peanuts4life are you ok?” and then you said you were. Such a relief.

    And your suicide advice? Top notch. I’m going to make sure that every time I hear someone threaten their own life, I’m going to tell them “Don’t. First you have to confess your pain. Don’t you know how different people’s perceptions can be?”

    Then they’re going to say “Yo, you’re right. I must never kill myself, but especially not before confessing my pain.”

    Such worldly wisdom, I’m practically speechless.