Can we have something like this:
if \"Debug\"==\"$(ConfigurationName)\"
(
goto :nocopy
)
else if \"Release\"==\"$(ConfigurationName)\"
(
del \"$(TargetPath).
You can have as many conditional statements as you want, just separate them by new line and lose else
So change
if "Debug"=="$(ConfigurationName)"
(
goto :nocopy
)
else if...
To
if "Debug" == "$(ConfigurationName)" (goto :nocopy)
if "Release" ==" $(ConfigurationName)" (
del "$(TargetPath).config"
copy "$(ProjectDir)\App.Release.config" "$(TargetPath).config" )
if ...
and it will compile and run just fine
Note: The commands will be interpreted line-by-line the same way as a DOS batch file, so it is important to place the opening parenthesis “(” in the same line as the if statement and the closing parenthesis ")" in the same line as the last command in the block.
If your post-build logic is getting complicated, I'd suggest moving it to an external file. For example, the following post-build event:
CALL "$(ProjectDir)PostBuild.cmd" $(ConfigurationName)
executes a batch file PostBuild.cmd in the project-directory, passing $(ConfigurationName) as a parameter. You could also pass other parameters, such as $(TargetPath).
You can then implement whatever you want including multiple if statements, and more importantly, debug it without running a Visual Studio build.