Added a test near positive extermes and two test near negative
extermes as well one for 0.
Added a test using the `as` cast and one with comparison with 0.
Reason: The last byte in Little Endian representation of negative
integers start at 128 (Ox80) till 255 (OxFF). The comparison before
the fix didn't check for 128 which made is_negative variable as false.
internal: remove spurious regex dependency
- replace tokio's env-filter with a smaller&simpler targets filter
- reshuffle logging infra a bit to make sure there's only a single place where we read environmental variables
- use anyhow::Result in rust-analyzer binary
- replace tokio's env-filter with a smaller&simpler targets filter
- reshuffle logging infra a bit to make sure there's only a single place
where we read environmental variables
- use anyhow::Result in rust-analyzer binary
fix: deduplicate fields and types in completion
Fixes#15024
- `hir_ty::autoderef()` (which is only meant to be used outside `hir-ty`) now deduplicates types and completely resolves inference variables within.
- field completion now deduplicates fields of the same name and only picks such field of the first type in the deref chain.
Emit `'_` for lifetime generics in `HirDisplay`
This makes the generated code not linted by `rust_2018_idioms` lint. But that is an allow by default lint, so should we do this? Maybe we should only do this for `DisplayTarget::SourceCode`?
fix: consider outer binders when folding captured items' type
Fixes#14966
Basically, the crash is caused by us producing a broken type and passing it to chalk: `&dyn for<type> [for<> Implemented(^1.0: A<^0.0>)]` (notice the innermost bound var `^0.0` has no corresponding binder). It's created in `CapturedItemWithoutTy::with_ty()`, which didn't consider outer binders when folding types to replace placeholders with bound variables.
The fix is one-liner, but I've also refactored the surrounding code a little.
- use `DefWithBodyId::as_generic_def_id()`
- add comments on `InferenceResult` invariant
- move local helper function to bottom to comply with style guide
MIR episode 5
This PR inits drop support (it is very broken at this stage, some things are dropped multiple time, drop scopes are wrong, ...) and adds stdout support (`println!` doesn't work since its expansion is dummy, but `stdout().write(b"hello world\n")` works if you use `RA_SYSROOT_HACK`) for interpreting. There is no useful unit test that it can interpret yet, but it is a good sign that it didn't hit a major road block yet.
In MIR lowering, it adds support for slice pattern and anonymous const blocks, and some fixes so that we can evaluate `SmolStr::new_inline` in const eval. With these changes, 57 failed mir body remains.
fix: Diagnose non-value return and break type mismatches
Could definitely deserve more polished diagnostics, but this at least brings the message across for now.
Introduce macro sub-namespaces and `macro_use` prelude
This PR implements two mechanisms needed for correct macro name resolution: macro sub-namespace and `macro_use` prelude.
- [macro sub-namespaces][subns-ref]
Macros have two sub-namespaces: one for function-like macro and the other for those in attributes (including custom derive macros). When we're resolving a macro name for function-like macro, we should ignore non-function-like macros, and vice versa.
This helps resolve single-segment macro names because we can (and should, as rustc does) fallback to names in preludes when the name in the current module scope is in different sub-namespace.
- [`macro_use` prelude][prelude-ref]
`#[macro_use]`'d extern crate declarations (including the standard library) bring their macros into scope, but they should not be prioritized over local macros (those defined in place and those explicitly imported).
We have been bringing them into legacy (textual) macro scope, which has the highest precedence in name resolution. This PR introduces the `macro_use` prelude in crate-level `DefMap`s, whose precedence is lower than local macros but higher than the standard library prelude.
The first 3 commits are drive-by fixes/refactors.
Fixes#8828 (prelude)
Fixes#12505 (prelude)
Fixes#12734 (prelude)
Fixes#13683 (prelude)
Fixes#13821 (prelude)
Fixes#13974 (prelude)
Fixes#14254 (namespace)
[subns-ref]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/names/namespaces.html#sub-namespaces
[prelude-ref]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/names/preludes.html#macro_use-prelude
Make line-index a lib, use nohash_hasher
These seem like they are not specific to rust-analyzer and could be pulled out to their own libraries. So I did.
https://github.com/azdavis/millet/issues/31
Register obligations during path inference
Fixes#14635
When we infer path expressions that resolve to some generic item, we need to consider their generic bounds. For example, when we resolve a path `Into::into` to `fn into<?0, ?1>` (note that `?0` is the self type of trait ref), we should register an obligation `?0: Into<?1>` or else their relationship would be lost.
Relevant part in rustc is [`add_required_obligations_with_code()`] that's called in [`instantiate_value_path()`].
[`instantiate_value_path()`]: 3462f79e94/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/fn_ctxt/_impl.rs (L1052)
[`add_required_obligations_with_code()`]: 3462f79e94/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/fn_ctxt/_impl.rs (L1411)