Windows 10: What are these Powershell ISEs for?

Discus and support What are these Powershell ISEs for? in Windows 10 Drivers and Hardware to solve the problem; https://i.imgur.com/yaSWw24.png What are these for?... Discussion in 'Windows 10 Drivers and Hardware' started by watercolorslessthan3, Jul 10, 2018.

  1. What are these Powershell ISEs for?


    https://i.imgur.com/yaSWw24.png


    What are these for?

    :)
     
    watercolorslessthan3, Jul 10, 2018
    #1

  2. Windows Powershell ISE Cannot Find the ISE Module

    For some reason all the sudden when I start windows Powershell ISE it now states in red that

    ipmo : The specified module 'ISE' was not loaded because no valid module file was found in any module directory.

    Any suggestions on how to get this PowerShell ISE back to it's original State?

    I need it so bad for working with NANO services.
     
    Erik K Little, Jul 10, 2018
    #2
  3. Uninstall Powershell 32 bits & Powershell ISE 32 bits?

    Windows 10 64 bits

    After the upgrade to Windows 10, I keep having 4 Powershell apps: Powershell 32 bits & Powershell ISE 32 bits, Powershell 64 bits & Powershell ISE 64bits. I think that the version is 4.

    Given that my OS is 64bits, normally I will never use the powershell 32 bits apps, no?, if so, then I just Uninstall Powershell 32 bits & Powershell ISE 32 bits?

    Thanks for your expertise
     
    arturoruiznerv, Jul 10, 2018
    #3
  4. What are these Powershell ISEs for?

    PowerShell ISE stuck in loading screen

    Every time I'm away from the location where my mapped (to S:\) network drive is located (and thus inaccessible), the PowerShell ISE stalls in the "Loading..." screen.

    The profile.ps1 never gets a chance to run because the PowerShell ISE never escapes from the Loading... screen.

    The normal PowerShell prompt works fine, but I doesn't provide all the nice features of the PowerShell ISE, so I would like to find a way to get the PowerShell ISE to work when I'm away from the physical location where the mapped network drive works.

    If I remember to unmap the network drive before I leave that location, everything is fine. It's when I forget to unmap the drive prior to shutting down and moving to a different location that this problem rears its ugly head.

    It's as if the PowerShell ISE is trying to access the underlying UNC \\whatever\something\ even though there is no hope of doing so if I'm physically away from the location where that UNC exists.

    Is there some way to fix this issue that doesn't involve reinstalling Windows 10 Enterprise 64-bit?
     
    Fred Morrison, Jul 10, 2018
    #4
Thema:

What are these Powershell ISEs for?

Loading...
  1. What are these Powershell ISEs for? - Similar Threads - are Powershell ISEs

  2. issue with Powershell ISE

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    issue with Powershell ISE: I get this error when running scriptConnect-MsolService : The term 'Connect-MsolService' is not recognized as the name of a cmdlet, function, script file, or operable program. Check the spelling of the name, or if a path was included, verify that the path is correct and try...
  3. issue with Powershell ISE

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    issue with Powershell ISE: I get this error when running scriptConnect-MsolService : The term 'Connect-MsolService' is not recognized as the name of a cmdlet, function, script file, or operable program. Check the spelling of the name, or if a path was included, verify that the path is correct and try...
  4. issue with Powershell ISE

    in Windows 10 Customization
    issue with Powershell ISE: I get this error when running scriptConnect-MsolService : The term 'Connect-MsolService' is not recognized as the name of a cmdlet, function, script file, or operable program. Check the spelling of the name, or if a path was included, verify that the path is correct and try...
  5. Windows PowerShell ISE vs Windows PowerShell: What is the difference?

    in Windows 10 News
    Windows PowerShell ISE vs Windows PowerShell: What is the difference?: [ATTACH]A Shell is a program that uses the command line interface or graphical user interface and allows users to access and control their computers by entering commands. The program is named Shell because it is the outermost layer of an operating system. The shell acts as a...
  6. is PowerShell ISE important ?

    in Windows 10 Installation and Upgrade
    is PowerShell ISE important ?: Hi community ,hope everyone is doing well . i have a question which is "is PowerShell ISE important or can i uninstall it ?" . Regards,Manas https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/is-powershell-ise-important/5f60df63-2fe3-4dfa-9b4b-6c5ca77cf77b
  7. Powershell ISE issue

    in Windows 10 Installation and Upgrade
    Powershell ISE issue: Unable to open PowerShell ISE x64 in admin mode nor user login mode. As PowerShell ISE x32 bit is working fine. Kindly suggest. https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/powershell-ise-issue/776ffd19-f785-4cda-9962-f32b0e3a693b
  8. PowerShell ISE and Word-Wrap

    in Windows 10 Ask Insider
    PowerShell ISE and Word-Wrap: How hard would it be for PowerShell to ISE to actually have word wrap? For a small change like this I can't see it taking a long time to implement. I feel like this should have been possible years ago. submitted by /u/cloud7up [link] [comments]...
  9. Powershell ISE Will Not Start

    in Windows 10 Customization
    Powershell ISE Will Not Start: Hello, I'm having an issue with Powershell ISE. Powershell itself works just fine, as does Powershell x86 ISE. I'm on Windows 10 1909. Since ISE is no longer supported, did they break something with release 1909? I also tried on my jump box that is also on 1909 and...
  10. PowerShell ISE Focus

    in Windows 10 Customization
    PowerShell ISE Focus: When running portions of a script in PowerShell ISE, it would be nice if the focus didn't switch to the immediate window below. Now I have to use some form of Ctrl+Tab (or my mouse) to get back to the script pane to test the next line of my script as I'm building my script...