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I've spent a significant amount of work time for a few years working with Powershell. There's a hell of a lot it does right, and it's set up such that the grand majority of commands and modules follow the same syntax in terms of pattern and terms. It's not hard to just pick up and go with new stuff within it. That is it's biggest strength, and it makes Windows SysAdmin work a hell of a lot smoother.
That said, there's a shit ton of little idiosyncracies that would catch me every time if I wasn't using VSCode/ium with Intellisense suggestions.
Specifying the properties to return from Get-ADUser? Use -Properties. Specifying the properties to return through Select-Object? Use -Property.
Working with Exchange Online? Import the module. Confused that the commands you need don't exist after you imported it? You have to use the Connect-ExchangeOnline command to authenticate, connect, and generate and load a new temporary module first with just the commands for shit the account you used to authenticate has access to. This is the only module I've found that does this.
Need to send an email using your script? I sure hope you like using third party modules or loading dlls to do .Net/C# shit through PowerShell, because if you use the built in Send-MailMessage function we'll give you a warning that it's insecure, with a link to more info that's just a wiki page on github for .Net, not PowerShell, without any actual info that notes this has been an issue for six fucking years! The warning even states that there is no built in alternative in PowerShell despite it being insecure.
Don't even get me started with the absolute clusterfuck of the multitude of modules for working with Azure, half of them deprecated without equivalent functionality existing in the replacement. The latest and greatest one doesn't even has documentation pages with shit like "NOTE: FILL THIS INFO IN LATER" in them.
Like ffs, am I using a professional product developed by one of the largest corps in the world, or someone's open source project? It often feels like you get the worst of both worlds.
Don't get me wrong, I love PowerShell, it's an amazing tool for Windows environment sysadmin work. I just often find people's attitudes about it to be either "it's a neat toy" or "it's the most amazing tool on Windows ever" when the reality is between.