![]() I call it “All Programs” and usually make only use of it when I want to integrate a new tool into Royal TS:Īs you can see in the screenshot above, the PowerShell process I previously started is still running and is shown in the Dashboard. For this purpose, I always have an “empty” External Application connection just for the Dashboard functionality. The best way to integrate external applications into Royal TS is by using the dashboard. Embedding PowerShellįor the next step, leave the PowerShell window open and switch to Royal TS. Try a couple of values, such as 500 or 1000. This depends on your screen resolution, your font size, etc. Make sure the Screen Buffer Size is big enough to enable Royal TS to completely embed the PowerShell window. ![]() Then click the System Menu and click on Properties: To do that, make sure you start the powershell.exe from an elevated command prompt (in %windir%/system32/windowspowershell/v1.0). ![]() Preparing PowerShellīefore we can truly integrate PowerShell in Royal TS, we need to make sure that the PowerShell window can be resized to the appropriate window size. Since Royal TS V2.2 supports embedding external applications using the External Application connection type, you can integrate almost any other Windows application into your Royal TS workflow – including Powershell or the PowerShell ISE. While we are thinking about some cool scenarios for one of our next major Royal TS for Windows versions, I want to share some guidance on how to integrate PowerShell into your Royal TS workflow with the current version of Royal TS (V2.2 and later). We get a lot of feature request to better implement and support PowerShell capabilities in Royal TS. ![]()
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