Run PowerShell as an administrator
Enter the following command:
[System.Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("Your_Environment_Variable_Here", "your_value_here", "User")
[System.Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("Your_Environment_Variable_Here", "your_value_here", "User")
· Make sure to replace 'Your_Environment_Variable_Here' with the appropriate variable name (CONNECTED_ACU_API_PASSWORD, CONNECTED_ACU_API_VENDOR_KEY or CONNECTED_ACU_API_USER_KEY); Also, make sure to replace 'your_value_here' with the respective values for the variables.
You can check if the environment variable was created by running the command below:
echo $env:Your_Environment_Variable_Here
Repeat the process for EACH of the necessary environment variables to run the code (CONNECTED_ACU_API_PASSWORD, CONNECTED_ACU_API_VENDOR_KEY, CONNECTED_ACU_API_USER_KEY).
ChatGPT 3.5 Answer
Creating environment variables and assigning values to them in PowerShell is straightforward. You can use the Set-Item
cmdlet to create or modify environment variables. Here's how you can do it:
# Set a new environment variable $env:MY_VARIABLE = "my_value" # Alternatively, you can use Set-Item cmdlet Set-Item -Path "Env:MY_VARIABLE" -Value "my_value" # To verify that the variable has been set $env:MY_VARIABLE
Replace "MY_VARIABLE"
with the name of your variable and "my_value"
with the desired value.
If you want to create a system-wide environment variable, you may need to run PowerShell with administrative privileges.