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Equivalent of *Nix 'which' command in PowerShell?

How do I ask PowerShell where something is?

For instance, "which notepad" and it returns the directory where the notepad.exe is run from according to the current paths.


P
Peter Mortensen

The very first alias I made once I started customizing my profile in PowerShell was 'which'.

New-Alias which get-command

To add this to your profile, type this:

"`nNew-Alias which get-command" | add-content $profile

The `n at the start of the last line is to ensure it will start as a new line.


You can put it in your profile script. More on profiles - msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb613488(VS.85).aspx
i like running: Get-Command <command> | Format-Table Path, Name so i can get the path where the command sits too.
Is there any way to have the path all the time without to type '| Format-Table Path, Name' ?
If you want the Unix-style behavior of giving you the path you'll need to pipe the output of get-command to select -expandproperty Path.
Use (gcm <command>).definition to get the path(s) only. gcm is the default alias for Get-Command. You can also use wildcards, eg: (gcm win*.exe).definition.
p
petrsnd

Here is an actual *nix equivalent, i.e. it gives *nix-style output.

Get-Command <your command> | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Definition

Just replace with whatever you're looking for.

PS C:\> Get-Command notepad.exe | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Definition
C:\Windows\system32\notepad.exe

When you add it to your profile, you will want to use a function rather than an alias because you can't use aliases with pipes:

function which($name)
{
    Get-Command $name | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Definition
}

Now, when you reload your profile you can do this:

PS C:\> which notepad
C:\Windows\system32\notepad.exe

I use this alternate syntax: "(Get-Command notepad).definition"
@B00merang Your syntax is great--definitely more concise--but unfortunately, even with the pipe removed, it can't be added as an alias unless you include the name of the program you are looking for.
This is an old post, but in case anyone is sent here by Google (like I was), this answer works with more types of Powershell commands than the accepted answer. For example, I have an alias named okta that points to a Powershell script named okta.ps1 that is not on my $PATH. Using the accepted answer returns the script name (okta -> okta.ps1). This is OK but it doesn't tell me the location of okta.ps1. Using this answer, however, gives me the whole path (C:\Users\blah\etc\scripts\okta.ps1). So +1 from me.
D
David Mohundro

I usually just type:

gcm notepad

or

gcm note*

gcm is the default alias for Get-Command.

On my system, gcm note* outputs:

[27] » gcm note*

CommandType     Name                                                     Definition
-----------     ----                                                     ----------
Application     notepad.exe                                              C:\WINDOWS\notepad.exe
Application     notepad.exe                                              C:\WINDOWS\system32\notepad.exe
Application     Notepad2.exe                                             C:\Utils\Notepad2.exe
Application     Notepad2.ini                                             C:\Utils\Notepad2.ini

You get the directory and the command that matches what you're looking for.


its a bit messy, but way cleaner than custom functions and arbitrary splits
When I type "gcm notepad" in my powershell command prompt, I just get the first two columns, and a third column called 'ModuleName' which is empty. Do you know how to force it to list the 'Definition' column by default?
@PiyushSoni that's probably because of an updated version of PowerShell. You can always display the other columns by doing something like gcm note* | select CommandType, Name, Definition. If you run it often, you should probably wrap it in a function, though.
S
Shell

Try this example:

(Get-Command notepad.exe).Path

Please add more code or explanation so that the OP can understand you better. Thank you.
Thank you for adding less code so I can actually remember this for once :P
This is what I wanted! It works with gcm as well: (gcm py.exe).path
P
Peter Mortensen

My proposition for the Which function:

function which($cmd) { get-command $cmd | % { $_.Path } }

PS C:\> which devcon

C:\local\code\bin\devcon.exe

This is a better answer than the accepted one. It allows you to add the postprocessing suffixes suggested above to provide better output; an alias doesn't.
C
Chris F Carroll

A quick-and-dirty match to Unix which is

New-Alias which where.exe

But it returns multiple lines if they exist so then it becomes

function which {where.exe command | select -first 1}

where.exe where should tell you C:\Windows\System32\where.exe
where.exe is equivalent to which -a, as it will give back all matching executables, not just the first one to be executed. That is, where.exe notepad gives c:\windows\notepad.exe and c:\windows\system32\notepad.exe. So this is particularly not suitable for the form $(which command). (Another problem is that it will print a nice, helpful error message if the command is not found, which will also not expand nicely in $() -- that can be remedied with /Q, but not as an alias.)
point taken. I edited answer but yes it's no longer so neat a solution
Please note that where seems to search the system PATH variable and not the current shell PATH variable. See this question
function which {where.exe $args[0] | select -first 1} would make it reusable. Also, posh seems way more reliable in dealing with paths, quotes, and whitespaces, so function which {$(gcm $args[0]).source | select -first 1} might be a better choice.
j
js2010

I like Get-Command | Format-List, or shorter, using aliases for the two and only for powershell.exe:

gcm powershell | fl

You can find aliases like this:

alias -definition Format-List

Tab completion works with gcm.

To have tab list all options at once:

set-psreadlineoption -editmode emacs

P
Peter Mortensen

This seems to do what you want (I found it on http://huddledmasses.org/powershell-find-path/):

Function Find-Path($Path, [switch]$All = $false, [Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.TestPathType]$type = "Any")
## You could comment out the function stuff and use it as a script instead, with this line:
#param($Path, [switch]$All = $false, [Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.TestPathType]$type = "Any")
   if($(Test-Path $Path -Type $type)) {
      return $path
   } else {
      [string[]]$paths = @($pwd);
      $paths += "$pwd;$env:path".split(";")

      $paths = Join-Path $paths $(Split-Path $Path -leaf) | ? { Test-Path $_ -Type $type }
      if($paths.Length -gt 0) {
         if($All) {
            return $paths;
         } else {
            return $paths[0]
         }
      }
   }
   throw "Couldn't find a matching path of type $type"
}
Set-Alias find Find-Path

But it's not really "which" since it works with any file(type) and doesn't find cmdlets, functions or aliases
P
Peter Mortensen

Check this PowerShell Which.

The code provided there suggests this:

($Env:Path).Split(";") | Get-ChildItem -filter notepad.exe

I know it's years on, but my path had "%systemroot%\system32\..." and PowerShell doesn't expand that environment variable and throws errors doing this.
P
Peter Mortensen

Try the where command on Windows 2003 or later (or Windows 2000/XP if you've installed a Resource Kit).

BTW, this received more answers in other questions:

Is there an equivalent of 'which' on Windows?

PowerShell equivalent to Unix which command?


where aliases to the Where-Object commandlet in Powershell, so typing where <item> in a Powershell prompt yields nothing. This answer is thus completely incorrect - as noted in the accepted answer in the first linked question, to get the DOS where, you need to type where.exe <item>.
A
Amin

If you want a comamnd that both accepts input from pipeline or as paramater, you should try this:

function which($name) {
    if ($name) { $input = $name }
    Get-Command $input | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Path
}

copy-paste the command to your profile (notepad $profile).

Examples:

❯ echo clang.exe | which
C:\Program Files\LLVM\bin\clang.exe

❯ which clang.exe
C:\Program Files\LLVM\bin\clang.exe

P
Peter Mortensen

Use:

function Which([string] $cmd) {
  $path = (($Env:Path).Split(";") | Select -uniq | Where { $_.Length } | Where { Test-Path $_ } | Get-ChildItem -filter $cmd).FullName
  if ($path) { $path.ToString() }
}

# Check if Chocolatey is installed
if (Which('cinst.bat')) {
  Write-Host "yes"
} else {
  Write-Host "no"
}

Or this version, calling the original where command.

This version also works better, because it is not limited to bat files:

function which([string] $cmd) {
  $where = iex $(Join-Path $env:SystemRoot "System32\where.exe $cmd 2>&1")
  $first = $($where -split '[\r\n]')
  if ($first.getType().BaseType.Name -eq 'Array') {
    $first = $first[0]
  }
  if (Test-Path $first) {
    $first
  }
}

# Check if Curl is installed
if (which('curl')) {
  echo 'yes'
} else {
  echo 'no'
}

G
George Ogden

You can install the which command from https://goprogram.co.uk/software/commands, along with all of the other UNIX commands.


J
Jeff Zeitlin

I have this which advanced function in my PowerShell profile:

    function which {
    <#
    .SYNOPSIS
    Identifies the source of a PowerShell command.
    .DESCRIPTION
    Identifies the source of a PowerShell command. External commands (Applications) are identified by the path to the executable
    (which must be in the system PATH); cmdlets and functions are identified as such and the name of the module they are defined in
    provided; aliases are expanded and the source of the alias definition is returned.
    .INPUTS
    No inputs; you cannot pipe data to this function.
    .OUTPUTS
    .PARAMETER Name
    The name of the command to be identified.
    .EXAMPLE
    PS C:\Users\Smith\Documents> which Get-Command
    
    Get-Command: Cmdlet in module Microsoft.PowerShell.Core
    
    (Identifies type and source of command)
    .EXAMPLE
    PS C:\Users\Smith\Documents> which notepad
    
    C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\notepad.exe
    
    (Indicates the full path of the executable)
    #>
        param(
        [String]$name
        )
    
        $cmd = Get-Command $name
        $redirect = $null
        switch ($cmd.CommandType) {
            "Alias"          { "{0}: Alias for ({1})" -f $cmd.Name, (. { which $cmd.Definition } ) }
            "Application"    { $cmd.Source }
            "Cmdlet"         { "{0}: {1} {2}" -f $cmd.Name, $cmd.CommandType, (. { if ($cmd.Source.Length) { "in module {0}" -f $cmd.Source} else { "from unspecified source" } } ) }
            "Function"       { "{0}: {1} {2}" -f $cmd.Name, $cmd.CommandType, (. { if ($cmd.Source.Length) { "in module {0}" -f $cmd.Source} else { "from unspecified source" } } ) }
            "Workflow"       { "{0}: {1} {2}" -f $cmd.Name, $cmd.CommandType, (. { if ($cmd.Source.Length) { "in module {0}" -f $cmd.Source} else { "from unspecified source" } } ) }
            "ExternalScript" { $cmd.Source }
            default          { $cmd }
        }
    }

b
blenderfreaky

If you have scoop you can install a direct clone of which:

scoop install which
which notepad

r
rayiik

There also always the option of using which. there are actually three ways to access which from Windows powershell, the first (not necessarily the best) wsl -e which command (this requires installation of windows subsystem for Linux and a running distro). B. gnuwin32 which is a port of several gnu binaries in .exe format as standle alone bundled lanunchers option three, install msys2 (cross compiler platform) if you go where it installed in /usr/bin you'll find many many gnu utils that are more up-to-date. most of them work as stand alone exe and can be copied from the bin folder to your home drive somewhere amd added to your PATH.


r
rayiik

There also always the option of using which. there are actually three ways to access which from Windows powershell

The first, (though not the best) is wsl(windows subsystem for linux)

wsl -e which command 

This requires installation of windows subsystem for Linux and a running distro.

Next is gnuwin32 which is a port of several gnu binaries in .exe format as standle alone bundled lanunchers

Third, install msys2 (cross compiler platform) if you go where it installed in /usr/bin you'll find many many gnu utils that are more up-to-date. most of them work as stand alone exe and can be copied from the bin folder to your home drive somewhere amd added to your PATH.