Create an HTML page from one or more PowerShell objects.

Syntax  
      ConvertTo-Html [[-head] [] ] [[-title] ] [[-body] [] ]
         [-CssUri ] [[-property] [] ]
            [-As { | LIST}] [-inputObject ]
               [-PreContent []] [-PostContent []] []
  
     ConvertTo-Html [-Fragment] [[-property] [] ]
            [-As { | LIST}] [-inputObject ]
               [-PreContent []] [-PostContent []] []

Key
    -head 
        Text to include in the <head> element of the HTML output.
        default = "HTML TABLE" 
        If you specify -Head, the -Title parameter is ignored.

    -title 
        Text to include in the <title> element of the HTML output.

    -body 
        Text to include in the <body> element of the HTML.

    -Fragment
        Generate only an HTML table. The HTML, HEAD, TITLE, and BODY tags are omitted.

    -inputObject 
        The objects to represent as an HTML table. 
        A variable that contains the objects or a command/expression
        that gets the objects.

        If you submit multiple objects, such as all of the services on a computer,
        ConvertTo-Html will display the properties of the collection / array. 
        To display the individual objects, use the  to
        pipe the objects to ConvertTo-Html one at a time.

   -As 
        Format the object as a table or a list. Valid values are TABLE or LIST.

    -CssUri 
        The Uniform Resource Identifier () of the cascading style sheet
        The CSS URI is included as a style sheet link in the output.

    -property 
        Properties of the input object to appear in the HTML table.
        
    -PreContent []
       Text to add before the opening <TABLE> tag.

    -PostContent []
       Text to add after the closing </TABLE> tag. 
        
   :
       -Verbose, -Debug, -ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable, -WarningAction, -WarningVariable,
       -OutBuffer -OutVariable.

The object property names appear as HTML table column headings.

Examples

Display the date as HTML on the console :

PS C:\> get-date | convertto-html

Save the system processes to C:\processes.html

PS C:\> Get-Process | ConvertTo-Html name,path,fileversion | Set-Content c:\processes.htm

Save the system services to C:\services.html

PS C:\> get-service | ConvertTo-Html -Title "Services" -Body "<H2>The result of get-service</H2> " -Property Name,Status  >  c:\services.html

Save the system services to C:\services.html and format in color (example from Hung Yuwu ):

PS C:\> get-service | ConvertTo-Html -Title "Services" -Body "<H2>The result of get-service</H2> " -Property Name,Status | 
foreach {if($_ -like "*<td>Running</td>*"){$_ -replace "<tr>", "<tr bgcolor=green>"}elseif($_ -like "*<td>Stopped</td>*"){$_ -replace "<tr>", "<tr bgcolor=red>"}else{$_}} > c:\services.html

Save the system services to C:\services.html and format with css, then open the HTML page with Invoke-Item:

PS C:\> get-service | ConvertTo-Html -CssUri "SS64.css" > c:\services.html
PS C:\> Invoke-Item c:\services.html

Get events from the "Windows PowerShell" event log, select only the ID, Level, and Task properties and format as HTML:

PS C:\> get-eventlog -log "Windows PowerShell" | convertto-html -property id, level, task

“If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack” ~ Winston Churchill

Related:

export-clixml - Produce a clixml representation of a PowerShell objects
export-csv - Export to Comma Separated Values (spreadsheet)
Invoke-Item - Invoke an executable or open a file