Probably a case of cooking up a suitable regular expression with captures.
This one appears to work for the example you give.
<property name="prefix" value="this " />
<replaceregexp flags="s" match="^(${prefix})?(.*)" replace="${prefix}\2">
<fileset dir="files" />
</replaceregexp>
- The files are specified using a fileset - here all files in the
files
directory.
- The prefix we want to optionally add is
this
, which is stored in a property, as we need to mention it in two places.
- The
flags="s"
setting ensures that we treat the file as a single string for match purposes (rather than matching each line).
- The regular expression looks for the prefix string in the file, and stores it in capture
\1
- which is discarded.
- The rest of the string is in capture
\2
.
- Replace with the prefix string, followed by capture
\2
.
You might think of it as always adding the prefix, but after taking the prefix away if it's already there...except that the replaceregexp
task will not write the file unless if differs from the existing.