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Home/ Questions/Q 3481378
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T10:26:31+00:00 2026-05-18T10:26:31+00:00

In Visual Studio, you can unload a project, and when you build the solution

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In Visual Studio, you can unload a project, and when you build the solution (Right-click/build), the unloaded project is not built. However, when you run MSBuild from the command line, like this;

C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v3.5\msbuild.exe 
  "$slnFile" /t:build /p:Configuration=Debug /verbosity:minimal

the project is built. Is there a way to get MSBuild to respect the projects unloaded in Visual Studio?

The situation is that we have a solution with a number of projects. One of them requires special software to build, and that exists on our build machine but not on all developer machines. This means I can’t do a straight command-line build or it fails when it encounters the rogue project.

Any ideas?

[EDIT: MSBuild must be able to do this, because Visual Studio uses MSBuild to do the building. What does VS do that the command line doesn’t?]

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T10:26:31+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 10:26 am

    MSBuild knows nothing about what loaded state the project within a solution are, so what you are trying to do is not possible.

    As an alternative, you could define a new build configuration called BUILD_MACHINE (using the Build -> Configuration Manager menu). In this build configuration, enable all of your projects to be built. This is then the configuration that you build on you build machine(s). If you disable the specific project from building in the Debug and Release build configurations (using the same menu options), you can build these configurations on your development machine without having to unload the project you don’t want to build.

    MSBuild honours build configurations, so you can build your non-build machine build configurations (eg. Debug, Release) using Visual Studio or MSBuild and the troublesome project will not get built.

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