In textmate, keyword.control is used for all kinds of things; in fact,
the default scope mapping for keyword is keyword.control!
So let's add a less ambiguous controlFlow modifier
See Microsoft/vscode#94367
3844: vscode: restore removed default values r=matklad a=Veetaha
After refactoring the config we forgot to set defaults for
some properties like workspaceLoaded, callInfo.full, etc.
This commit restored them to being turned on by defult,
as well added defaults for other props to be more explicit
on their defualt value.
cc @matklad
Co-authored-by: veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
After refactoring the config we forgot to set defaults for
some properties like workspaceLoaded, callInfo.full, etc.
This commit restored them to being turned on by defult,
as well added defaults for other props to be more explicit
on their defualt value.
3817: vscode: highlight syntax tree ro editor r=matklad a=Veetaha
Small textmate grammar declaration to make rust-analyzer syntax tree more easily inspectable:
Btw, if we change the file extension of our `ra_syntax/test_data/**` files to `.rast` they should be highlighted in vscode too.
The colors of the tokens are actually going to be color-theme dependent, or you can customize them via:
```jsonc
{
"editor.tokenColorCustomizations": {
"textMateRules": [ { "scope": "name", "settings": { /* */ } } ]
}
}
```
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/36276403/78204947-99f9d600-74a3-11ea-8315-cb1c87810c7c.png)
Related: #3682
Co-authored-by: veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
3780: Simplify r=matklad a=Veetaha
I absolutely love tha fact that removing `.clone()` simplifies the code comparing to other languages where it's actually the contrary (ahem ~~`std::move()`~~)
3787: vscode: add syntax tree inspection hovers and highlights r=matklad a=Veetaha
![inspect-tree](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/36276403/78029767-c7426900-7369-11ea-9ed6-b8a0f8e05bac.gif)
I implemented the reverse mapping (when you hover in the rust editor), but it seems overcomplicated, so I removed it
Related #3682
Co-authored-by: veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
3695: vscode: simplify and refactor config r=matklad a=Veetaha
Removed unnecessary interfaces, changed `cfg` to be a getter to ensure the fresh values any time possible.
Migrated from explicit casts to implicit.
Co-authored-by: veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
3696: vscode: more type safety r=matklad a=Veetaha
3698: Consider references when applying postfix completions r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Sometimes my RA debugging workflow breaks because `.dbg` is applied to the variable that is used later in the code.
It's safer to consider the refences to avoid this for completions that may trigger the move.
3703: Don't try to enable proposed API's on stable r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
This cancel is unnecessary since we cancel the previous inlay hints requests in `fetchHints()` method itself. This is not a hard error, we just called cancel() 2 times.
3629: Alternative aproach to plugin auto update r=matklad a=matklad
This is very much WIP (as in, I haven't run this once), but I like the result so far.
cc @Veetaha
The primary focus here on simplification:
* local simplification of data structures and control-flow: using union of strings instead of an enum, using unwrapped GitHub API responses
* global simplification of control flow: all logic is now in `main.ts`, implemented as linear functions without abstractions. This is stateful side-effective code, so arguments from [Carmack](http://number-none.com/blow/john_carmack_on_inlined_code.html) very much apply. We need all user interractions, all mutations, and all network requests to happen in a single file.
* as a side-effect of condensing everything to functions, we can get rid of various enums. The enums were basically a reified control flow:
```
enum E { A, B }
fn foo() -> E {
if cond { E::A } else { E::B }
}
fn bar(e: E) {
match e {
E::A => do_a(),
E::B => do_b(),
}
}
==>>
fn all() {
if cond { do_a() } else { do_b() }
}
```
* simplification of model: we don't need to reinstall on settings update, we can just ask the user to reload, we don't need to handle nightly=>stable fallback, we can ask the user to reinstall extension, (todo) we don't need to parse out the date from the version, we can use build id for nightly and for stable we can write the info directly into package.json.
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
Everything now happens in main.ts, in the bootstrap family of
functions. The current flow is:
* check everything only on extension installation.
* if the user is on nightly channel, try to download the nightly
extension and reload.
* when we install nightly extension, we persist its release id, so
that we can check if the current release is different.
* if server binary was not downloaded by the current version of the
extension, redownload it (we persist the version of ext that
downloaded the server).
3534: Feature: vscode impl nightlies download and installation r=Veetaha a=Veetaha
I need to test things more, but the core shape of the code is quite well-formed.
The main problem is that we save the release date only for nightlies and there are no means to get the release date of the stable extension (i.e. for this we would need to consult the github releases via a network request, or we would need to somehow save this info into package.json or any other file accessible from the extension code during the deployment step, but this will be very hard I guess).
So there is an invariant that the users can install nightly only from our extension and they can't do it manually, because when installing the nightly `.vsix` we actually save its release date to `globalState`
Closes: #3402
TODO:
- [x] More manual tests and documentation
cc @matklad @lnicola
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <gerzoh1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>