Get index of current item in a PowerShell loop

For PowerShell 3.0 and later, there is one built in :)

foreach ($item in $array) {
    $array.IndexOf($item)
}

.NET has some handy utility methods for this sort of thing in System.Array:

PS> $a = 'a','b','c'
PS> [array]::IndexOf($a, 'b')
1
PS> [array]::IndexOf($a, 'c')
2

Good points on the above approach in the comments. Besides "just" finding an index of an item in an array, given the context of the problem, this is probably more suitable:

$letters = { 'A', 'B', 'C' }
$letters | % {$i=0} {"Value:$_ Index:$i"; $i++}

Foreach (%) can have a Begin sciptblock that executes once. We set an index variable there and then we can reference it in the process scripblock where it gets incremented before exiting the scriptblock.


I am not sure it's possible with an "automatic" variable. You can always declare one for yourself and increment it:

$letters = { 'A', 'B', 'C' }
$letters | % {$counter = 0}{...;$counter++}

Or use a for loop instead...

for ($counter=0; $counter -lt $letters.Length; $counter++){...}

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