An interesting and weird thing I noticed writing PowerShell classes lines:
class A {
[object] WhereObject(){
return @(1,2) | Where-Object {$_ -gt 2}
}
[object] Where(){
return @(1,2).Where( {$_ -gt 2})
}
}
$a = new-object A
$a.WhereObject() # Throw exception Index was out of range. Must be non-negative and less than the size of the collection.
$a.Where() # Works well
It looks like it is by design. Why does it work so?
Workaround
Function which explicitly convert "empty" value to $null:
function Get-NullIfEmpty {
param(
[Parameter(ValueFromPipeline=$true)][array] $CollectionOrEmtpy
)
begin { $output = $null }
process
{
if($output -eq $null -and $CollectionOrEmtpy -ne $null){
$output = @()
}
foreach ($element in $CollectionOrEmtpy)
{
$output += $element
}
}
end { return $output }
}
In this case, the method will look like:
[object] WhereObject() {
return @(1,2) | Where-Object {$_ -gt 2} | Get-NullIfEmpty
}
I tried to return an empty array from the class method, but it is also tricky because for a regular function an empty array means "nothing" as well. If you have a call chain like method1 -> function -> method2 - method1 throw the same exception. Because the function converts an empty array to nothing.
So converting to $null is optimal in my case :)