How to: Reference the name or location of the project file
You can use the name or location of the project in the project file itself without having to create your own property. MSBuild provides reserved properties that reference the project file name and other properties related to the project. For more information on reserved properties, see MSBuild reserved and well-known properties.
Use the project properties
MSBuild provides some reserved properties that you can use in your project files without defining them each time. For example, the reserved property MSBuildProjectName
provides a reference to the project file name. The reserved property MSBuildProjectDirectory
provides a reference to the project file location.
To use the project properties
Reference the property in the project file with the $() notation, just as you would with any property. For example:
<CSC Sources = "@(CSFile)" OutputAssembly = "$(MSBuildProjectName).exe"/> </CSC>
An advantage of using a reserved property is that any changes to the project file name are incorporated automatically. The next time that you build the project, the output file will have the new name with no further action required on your part.
For more info on the use of special characters in file or project references, see MSBuild special characters.
Note
Reserved properties cannot be redefined in the project file.
Example 1
The following example project file references the project name as a reserved property to specify the name for the output.
<Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003"
DefaultTargets = "Compile">
<!-- Specify the inputs -->
<ItemGroup>
<CSFile Include = "consolehwcs1.cs"/>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name = "Compile">
<!-- Run the Visual C# compilation using
input files of type CSFile -->
<CSC Sources = "@(CSFile)"
OutputAssembly = "$(MSBuildProjectName).exe" >
<!-- Set the OutputAssembly attribute of the CSC task
to the name of the project -->
<Output
TaskParameter = "OutputAssembly"
ItemName = "EXEFile" />
</CSC>
<!-- Log the file name of the output file -->
<Message Text="The output file is @(EXEFile)"/>
</Target>
</Project>
Example 2
The following example project file uses the MSBuildProjectDirectory
reserved property to create the full path to a file in the project file location.
<Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<!-- Build the path to a file in the root of the project -->
<PropertyGroup>
<NewFilePath>$([System.IO.Path]::Combine($(MSBuildProjectDirectory), `BuildInfo.txt`))</NewFilePath>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>
The example uses the Property function syntax to call the static .NET Framework method System.IO.Path.Combine.