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Home/ Questions/Q 6942281
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T12:59:41+00:00 2026-05-27T12:59:41+00:00

What’s the deal with Powershell commandlet switch parameters that require a colon? Consider Exchange

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What’s the deal with Powershell commandlet switch parameters that require a colon?

Consider Exchange 2010 management shell cmdlet Move-ActiveMailboxDatabase. The Confirm switch is a System.Management.Automation.SwitchParameter and must be used like so,

Move-ActiveMailboxDatabase -Confirm:$false

Without the colon the command fails to recognize the don’t confirm switch like so,

Move-ActiveMailboxDatabase -Confirm $false

Why is that? What’s the difference the colon makes there? Why Exchange2010 seems to be about the only thing I’ve noticed this behavior?

I’ve browsed through Powershell in Action and Powershell 2.0, but didn’t find anything about this syntax. Scope resolution and .Net object access uses are documented on those books though.

My Google-fu found an article which claims that it explicitly forwards switch parameter values, but fails to explain what that is about.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T12:59:42+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 12:59 pm

    When you do:

    Move-ActiveMailboxDatabase -Confirm $false
    

    you are not saying Confirm parameter accepts the $false. You are saying -Confirm and also passing an (separate) argument to the cmdlet with value $false.

    Since Confirm is a switch, just the presence of -Confirm means it is true. Absence of -Confirm means it is false.

    Let me give you a script example:

    param([switch]$test)
    
    write-host Test is $test
    

    If you just run the script without any arguments / paramters i.e .\script.ps1 you get output:

    Test is False
    

    If you run it as .\script.ps1 -test, the output is

    Test is True
    

    If you run it as .\script.ps1 -test $false, the output is

    Test is True
    

    If you run it as .\script.ps1 -test:$false the output is

    Test is False
    

    It is in scenarios where the value for a switch variable itself has to be determined from another variable that the : is used.

    For example, consider the script:

    param ([boolean]$in)
    
    function func([switch] $test){
    write-host Test is $test
    }
    
    func -test:$in
    

    Here if you run it as .\script.ps1 -in $false, you get

    Test is false
    

    If you weren’t able to use the :, you would have had to write it as:

    if($in){  func -test}
    else { func }
    
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