## The set-volume.ps1 PowerShell Script This PowerShell script sets the audio volume in percent. ## Parameters ```powershell set-volume.ps1 [-Volume] [] -Volume Specifies the percent number Required? true Position? 1 Default value 0 Accept pipeline input? false Accept wildcard characters? false [] This script supports the common parameters: Verbose, Debug, ErrorAction, ErrorVariable, WarningAction, WarningVariable, OutBuffer, PipelineVariable, and OutVariable. ``` ## Example ```powershell PS> ./set-volume 50 ``` ## Notes Author: Markus Fleschutz | License: CC0 ## Related Links https://github.com/fleschutz/PowerShell ## Source Code <# .SYNOPSIS Sets the volume .DESCRIPTION This PowerShell script sets the audio volume in percent. .PARAMETER volume Specifies the percent number .EXAMPLE PS> ./set-volume 50 .LINK https://github.com/fleschutz/PowerShell .NOTES Author: Markus Fleschutz | License: CC0 #> Param([Parameter(Mandatory=$true)] [ValidateRange(0,100)] [Int] $Volume) try { # Create the Windows Shell object. $obj = New-Object -ComObject WScript.Shell # First, set volume to zero. 1..50 | ForEach-Object { $obj.SendKeys( [char] 174 ) } # Calculate number of (volume up) key presses $keyPresses = [Math]::Ceiling( $Volume / 2 ) # Raise volume to specified level. for( $i = 0; $i -lt $keyPresses; $i++ ) { $obj.SendKeys( [char] 175 ) } & "$PSScriptRoot/give-reply.ps1" "$($Volume)% volume." exit 0 # success } catch { "⚠️ Error in line $($_.InvocationInfo.ScriptLineNumber): $($Error[0])" exit 1 } *Generated by convert-ps2md.ps1 using the comment-based help of set-volume.ps1*