As a PowerShell statement grows larger, it’s not always practical to enter it on a single line in the PowerShell console window. You can enter a long statement on several lines, but you must take into account how PowerShell treats new lines. When PowerShell determines that a line is incomplete, it continues to the next line when processing the statement. For example, when the first line in a statement ends with the pipe operator, as in
Get-Service | where {$_.status -eq ‘running’} | select displayname
PowerShell knows that the statement continues to the next line. This statement returns results similar to those shown in Figure 3. Notice the multiline prompt (>>) that precedes each line after the first line. When PowerShell expects a line to continue to a second line, it uses a multiline prompt for that line. You then type the next line of code at that prompt. Once PowerShell enters this multiline mode, it will continue in this mode and always prompt you with the multiline prompt. When you finish entering the last line, press Enter a second time to execute the command and return to the normal prompt.
Now suppose you break the statement before the pipe operator:
Get-Service | where {$_.status -eq ‘running’} | select displayname
PowerShell now interprets the first line as complete and processes it as an entire statement. PowerShell then tries to process the second line, which results in the error message: An empty pipe element is not permitted.
You can remedy this situation by adding a back tick (`) to the end of the lines:
Get-Service ` | where {$_.status -eq ‘running’} ` | select displayname
The back tick tells PowerShell that the statement continues to the next line. The statement now returns the same information shown in Figure 3.
PowerShell processes any line that it thinks is a complete statement. In other words, it automatically terminates a statement when it reaches a new line unless it thinks that the statement continues. However, you can also manually terminate a statement by adding a semi-colon (;) at the end:
Get-Service | where {$_.status -eq ‘running’} | select displayname;
This statement returns the same results as those shown in Figure 3.
http://www.windowsitpro.com/article/windows-powershell/how-to-handle-long-powershell-statements