In follow-up to the cmd.exe question, what is the PowerShell equivalent to echo %cd%, or Linux/Unix pwd?
5 Answers
PowerShell has many of the same commands as Linux. pwd is the command equivalent.
When you type pwd in Powershell, it is an alias to Get-Location.
In addition to Get-Location and its Aliases, you can also use the automatic variable $pwd.
The $pwd variable is nice because you have direct access to the PathInfo members. E.g.
$pwd.Path.PadLeft(80) $pwd.Drive And if you ever want to know what members there are you can just pipe the command\alias to Get-Member :
PS C:\Users\your-name-here\Desktop> pwd|Get-Member TypeName: System.Management.Automation.PathInfo Name MemberType Definition ---- ---------- ---------- Equals Method bool Equals(System.Object obj) GetHashCode Method int GetHashCode() GetType Method type GetType() ToString Method string ToString() Drive Property System.Management.Automation.PSDriveInfo Drive {get;} Path Property System.String Path {get;} Provider Property System.Management.Automation.ProviderInfo Provider {get;} ProviderPath Property System.String ProviderPath {get;} 2It's pwd. You can "stringify" it by putting it in the quotes. More so, you can build up paths like so: "$pwd\bin".
Get-Location cmdlet should do the trick
As Thiago mentioned, you can use these aliases: gl or pwd
If you only need the Path as Text without the usual header:
(gl).Path /* is a short form for Get-Location with the object Path,
or (pwd).Path