To complement Martin Brandl's helpful answer:
Like many other languages - but unlike VBScript, for instance - PowerShell uses distinct symbols for:
- the assignment operator (
=)
- vs. the equality test operator (
-eq).
This distinction enables using assignments as expressions, which is what you inadvertently did:
if ($TimeDifference = 14) ... # same as: if (($TimeDifference) = 14) ...
assigns 14 to variable $TimeDifference, as Martin explains, and, because the assignment is (of necessity, to serve as a conditional for if) enclosed in (...), returns the assigned value (the inner (...) around $TimeDifference make no difference here, however) and that value is used as the Boolean conditional for if.
That is, the (...) expression evaluated by if has value 14 - a nonzero number - and is therefore interpreted as $true in this Boolean context, irrespective of the original value of $TimeDifference.
Note:
To learn more about PowerShell's operators, run Get-Help about_Operators
To learn about how PowerShell interprets arbitrary values as Booleans in conditionals (to-Boolean coercion), see the bottom section of this answer.
To test variables or expressions that already are Booleans, just use them as-is or, if necessary, negate them with -not (!); e.g.:
if ($someBoolean) { # Better than: if ($someBoolean -eq $true)
if (-not $someBoolean) { # Better than: if ($someBoolean -eq $false)
Finally, here's a streamlined version of your code that doesn't require intermediate variables, uses a cast to convert the string to a [datetime] instance and uses [datetime]::now, the more efficient equivalent of Get-Date (though that will rarely matter).
if (([datetime]::now - [datetime] '2017-04-20').Days -eq 14) {
"test"
}
Note how "test" as a statement by itself implicitly sends output to PowerShell's (success) output stream, which prints to the console by default.
Write-Host bypasses this stream and should generally be avoided.