From Newsgroup: comp.lang.mumps
<div>I've used both of the Spaien tools. What these tools offer is the ability to create simple powershell-based GUIs.THey get you to draw a form, decorate it with controls, then allow you to wire-up scripts to each control. This is a very powerful way to create very simple GUIs.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I'm going to be totally blunt: I'm not really sold on PowerGUI yet. Just trying to write a simple function, and it looks like I'm going to have to copy and paste it into a powershell window manually to test it. I'm sure I'm missing something, but I can't even see how to run a selection, and when I try to run the entire script, it didn't add the function to the console at the bottom.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>PowerShell Studio 2017 Full-aVersion</div><div></div><div>Download File:
https://t.co/HgTMKTUb7n </div><div></div><div></div><div>I installed r language and r studio on my Fedora-20 system few months back. After that I got busy and now coming back to it. I wanted to know what my R version is, and I am unable to find any help on it. Is there any command/function I can use to find out version of r and rstudio?</div><div></div><div></div><div>How do find out which edition is installed without having the management studio installed? I have a server that functions as a license manager for another software. Upon investigation of a high RAM usage alert, I found that the sqlservr.exe process is taking up almost 2 GB of RAM.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Run installChocolatey.cmd from an elevated cmd.exe command prompt and it will install the latest version of Chocolatey. You can not run this from powershell.exe without making changes to your execution policy.</div><div></div><div></div><div>One of the great benefits of PowerShell is the ability to very quickly retrieve system information and metrics. We have added three new packager engines to PowerShell Studio and PrimalScript to make it easier to present or log that information in a standard way. I have already discussed the new Windows Application engine here:</div><div></div><div> -script-engines-for-windows-powershell/</div><div></div><div></div><div>Previously I showed you the new Windows Application engine ( -script-engines-for-windows-powershell/) and the Windows System Tray engine -a-system-tray-application-with-powershell/.</div><div></div><div>Today I will show you the last of the three new engines, the Windows Service engine.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The answer is simple. Windows PowerShell and PowerShell have different and independent executables (and icons). For Windows PowerShell, it is powershell.exe; for PowerShell, it is pwsh.exe.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I'm currently trying to install CCS v3.3 from my console. I'm using Windows Server 2022 and powershell for that. The installation works fine till the point, where the expected Error messages should appear. Because I'm running the Server 2022 as a Docker Container I don't have a GUI. So i can't ignore these Errors. Therefore the installer seems to be stuck at that point without an option to continue.</div><div></div><div> dd2b598166</div>
--- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2