MicrosoftDocs / windows-powershell-docs

This repo is used to contribute to Windows 10, Windows Server 2016, and MDOP PowerShell module documentation.
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
444 stars 591 forks source link

The Name parameter does accept wildcard characters #3493

Open ilatypov opened 1 year ago

ilatypov commented 1 year ago

The -Name parameter works fine as a wildcard expression.

PS C:\WINDOWS\system32> Disable-NetAdapterBinding -Name "Ethernet*" -ComponentID ms_tcpip6 -PassThru

Name                           DisplayName                                        ComponentID          Enabled
----                           -----------                                        -----------          -------
Ethernet                       Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6)             ms_tcpip6            False
Ethernet 3                     Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6)             ms_tcpip6            False
Ethernet 2                     Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6)             ms_tcpip6            False

https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/issues/6404


Document Details

Do not edit this section. It is required for learn.microsoft.com ➟ GitHub issue linking.

officedocspr5 commented 9 months ago

To make it easier for you to submit feedback on articles on learn.microsoft.com, we're transitioning our feedback system from GitHub Issues to a new experience.

As part of the transition, this GitHub Issue will be moved to a private repository. We're moving Issues to another repository so we can continue working on Issues that were open at the time of the transition. When this Issue is moved, you'll no longer be able to access it.

If you want to provide additional information before this Issue is moved, please update this Issue before December 15th, 2023.

With the new experience, you no longer need to sign in to GitHub to enter and submit your feedback. Instead, you can choose directly on each article's page whether the article was helpful. Then you can then choose one or more reasons for your feedback and optionally provide additional context before you select Submit.

Here's what the new experience looks like.

Note: The new experience is being rolled out across learn.microsoft.com in phases. If you don't see the new experience on an article, please check back later.

First, select whether the article was helpful:

Image showing a dialog asking if the article was helpful with yes and no answers.

Then, choose at least one reason for your feedback and optionally provide additional details about your feedback:

Article was helpful Article was unhelpful
Image showing a dialog asking how the article was helpful with several options. Image showing a dialog asking how the article wasn't helpful with several options.

Finally, select Submit and you're done!