Configuration is editor-independent. For this reason, we pick
JSON-schema as the repr of the source of truth. We do specify it using
rust-macros and some quick&dirty hackery though.
The idea for syncing truth with package.json is to just do that
manually, but there's a test to check that they are actually synced.
There's CLI to print config's json schema:
$ rust-analyzer --print-config-schema
We go with a CLI rather than LSP request/response to make it easier to
incorporate the thing into extension's static config. This is roughtly
how we put the thing in package.json.
6496: Use builtin scopes more r=matklad a=georgewfraser
VSCode has added more builtin fallback scopes, so we can remove some of our fallback scopes by aligning with their conventions.
Note that the macro scope doesn't seem to actually *work* at the moment. I have filed a bug with VSCode: https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/110150
Co-authored-by: George Fraser <george@fivetran.com>
- prevent `pat` from matching before `path` in metavariable types
- reduce the precedence of math operators so that assignment operators match correctly
- remove comment scope from ignored params
- underscores will automatically receive variable/param scope
- add raw ID syntax to modules, functions, and variables
6251: Semantic Highlight: Add Callable modifier for variables r=matklad a=GrayJack
This PR added the `HighlightModifier::Callable` variant and assigned it to variables and parameters that are fn pointers, closures and implements FnOnce trait.
This allows to colorize these variables/parameters when used in call expression.
6310: Rewrite algo::diff to support insertion and deletion r=matklad a=Veykril
This in turn also makes `algo::diff` generate finer diffs(maybe even minimal diffs?) as insertions and deletions aren't always represented as as replacements of parent nodes now.
Required for #6287 to go on.
Co-authored-by: GrayJack <gr41.j4ck@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
6274: Check cargoExtraArgs for undefined before using r=matklad a=feileacan
Fixes#6273
Co-authored-by: feileacan <54381366+feileacan@users.noreply.github.com>
6137: add a new TextMate grammar r=matklad a=dustypomerleau
Thanks to everyone working hard on Rust Analyzer - my impression is that it's quickly becoming the community default.
I think it would be helpful to have a more robust TextMate grammar to fall back on, for those who wish to disable semantic highlighting for any reason. It should allow theming of punctuation, and provide scopes for all tokens on the page. This can be done at zero cost to those who enable semantic highlighting, as the TextMate scopes will be invisible to those users.
I can see a couple ways of accomplishing this:
1. Ship a new grammar by merging this PR.
1. Ship no TextMate grammar at all (like the [Rust](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=rust-lang.rust) extension), and allow users to install a separate extension that provides the grammar of their choice (I have released this one as [Rust Syntax](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=dustypomerleau.rust-syntax)). If no grammar were installed, they would simply fall back to the default grammar provided by their editor. In the case of VS Code, the default grammar already matches what is currently being shipped, so users who choose not to override it would see no difference.
I have tried to choose sensible default scopes, in the hopes that a wider variety of themes would work out of the box with Rust, even if those themes do not yet supply scopes for semantic highlighting. There is definitely some interest in using this grammar with Rust Analyzer, as this was the very first issue after the syntax extension was shipped: https://github.com/dustypomerleau/rust-syntax/issues/1.
I considered simply using an alternative grammar alongside Rust Analyzer, but this doesn't seem possible. When RA starts, any existing grammar/extension is overridden, and I haven't been able to find a workaround.
Co-authored-by: Dusty Pomerleau <dustypomerleau@users.noreply.github.com>