I have used this in VS2010, VS2015, VS2017, VS2019, and VS2022. I prefer this solution because:
- The XML is reusable in any project
- The "RootContent" is chosen as a Build Action in the Visual Studio UI, just like any other "Content"
- The "CopyToOutputDirectory" is obeyed, just as you would expect
- The RootContent is added to the project's output: gets carried through Project-References, obeys "Clean", etc.
- The RootContent can be specified with a wildcard, preserving the recursive folder structure:
<RootContent Include="common\browserhawk\**">
<CopyToOutputDirectory>Always</CopyToOutputDirectory>
</RootContent>
Toward the beginning of project file:
<ItemGroup>
<AvailableItemName Include="RootContent">
<!-- Add "RootContent" as a choice in the "Build Action" dropdown. -->
<Visible>True</Visible>
</AvailableItemName>
</ItemGroup>
Borrowed From This Answer
After the Microsoft .targets Import:
<PropertyGroup>
<AssignTargetPathsDependsOn>
$(AssignTargetPathsDependsOn);
IncludeRootContentAsContent;
</AssignTargetPathsDependsOn>
</PropertyGroup>
<Target Name="IncludeRootContentAsContent">
<CreateItem Include="@(RootContent)" AdditionalMetadata="TargetPath=%(RecursiveDir)%(Filename)%(Extension)">
<Output ItemName="ContentWithTargetPath" TaskParameter="Include" />
</CreateItem>
</Target>
Borrowed From This Answer