![]() ![]() They are both cross platform (Windows, Linux, macOS) and with Windows Terminal, Windows now has a CLI tool that is close to, or in parity with, any Linux terminal. Version 7 focused on backwards compat first and foremost, then moved on to optimization and features. NET with version 7, which caused PowerShell to drop the "Core" and move up to version 7. NET Core had to many backward incompatibility issues with legacy. Thus PowerShell Core came and and was immediately shelved because it and. NET, the PowerShell people decided to build new PowerShell on top of that and make it cross-platform. ![]() NET Core/Mono project came out, which is cross platform. It's works well, lots of things still need it, but there is better and newer, like Python 3 out there. It's kept around in Windows for legacy purposes, because a lot of automation relies on it. The final version of Windows PowerShell was 5.1. ![]() Windows PowerShell is a Windows-only version of PowerShell. ![]()
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