Remove a favorite folder
Remove-RDMFavoriteFolder [-Name] <string> [-ForcePromptAnswer <DialogResult[]>] [<CommonParameters>]
Remove a favorite folder. If it contains entries, the user will be prompted to see if the favorite entries will be moved to the parent folder or deleted.
PS C:\> Remove-RDMFavoriteFolder -Name 'FolderA\SubFolderA'
Remove the favorite folder named 'SubFolderA'
Switch to use with caution. It will automatically answer prompt asking yes/no, yes/no/cancel, or ok/cancel questions. In case of multiple prompts, multiple values can be passed to this parameter. Here are the accepted values:
Yes: Accept the prompt. Cover the OK and Automatic value.
No: Refuse the yes/no/cancel prompt. Cancel is the fallback option if there is not an option No.
Cancel: Cancel the yes/no/cancel prompt. No is the fallback option if there is not an option Cancel.
Type: System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult[]
DefaultValue: ''
SupportsWildcards: false
Aliases: []
ParameterSets:
- Name: (All)
Position: Named
IsRequired: false
ValueFromPipeline: false
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName: false
ValueFromRemainingArguments: false
DontShow: false
AcceptedValues: []
HelpMessage: ''
Name of the favorite folder to delete.
Type: System.String
DefaultValue: ''
SupportsWildcards: false
Aliases: []
ParameterSets:
- Name: (All)
Position: 0
IsRequired: true
ValueFromPipeline: true
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName: false
ValueFromRemainingArguments: false
DontShow: false
AcceptedValues: []
HelpMessage: ''
This cmdlet supports the common parameters: -Debug, -ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable, -InformationAction, -InformationVariable, -OutBuffer, -OutVariable, -PipelineVariable, -ProgressAction, -Verbose, -WarningAction, and -WarningVariable. For more information, see about_CommonParameters.
For more information, type "Get-Help Remove-RDMFavoriteFolder -detailed". For technical information, type "Get-Help Remove-RDMFavoriteFolder -full".