
PowerShell Analyzer's set of "vizualizers" let you inspect objects returned from PowerShell commands. It offers a graphical editing environment and code completion but doesn't provide a graphical debugger. Shell Tools' PowerShell Analyzer is a different kind of PowerShell development product. You can download PowerGUI from Shell Tools' PowerShell Analyzer You can find out more about PowerGUI in the article "Features of PowerGUI Script Editor". I've used PowerGUI for many of my own PowerShell development projects. PowerGUI provides a multi-tabbed interface, IntelliSense-style PowerShell prompting, code snippets, and an integrated debugger. Quest Software originally developed PowerGUI, but the company later released it as freeware. PowerGUI was the first popular graphical PowerShell editor. It doesn't provide IntelliSense-style code completion or code snippets, but it does provide support for PowerShell debugging. The Windows PowerShell ISE offers a tabbed editing interface with color-coded syntax. In addition, 32-bit and 64-bit versions of PowerShell 2.0 can be downloaded from Microsoft's website ( /kb/968929) for other Windows OSs. The Windows PowerShell ISE is part of Windows PowerShell 2.0, which was first included with Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows 7. They include Microsoft's new Windows PowerShell Integrated Scripting Environment (ISE), PowerGUI, and Shell Tools' PowerShell Analyzer. In addition, there are a number of very capable free PowerShell editors available on the market. You can find more information about PowerShell Plus 3.1 at You can find more information about PowerGUI Pro MobileShell edition at /2/mobileshell-powershell-prompt-in-a-browser.

The latest releases of these products weren't available at the time that this review was written. Other commercial Windows PowerShell editing products that should be available by the time this review is published are Idera's PowerShell Plus 3.1 and Quest Software's PowerGUI Pro MobileShell edition.
