770: Fix introduce var duplicating newlines r=matklad a=vipentti
This fixes#713.
If the block before the statement we want to use introduce var on, had empty
lines these empty lines would also be added between the let-statement and
the current line where the new variable is used.
This fixes that by trimming excess newlines from the start of the indent chunk
and simply adding a single newline (when the chunk had newlines) between the
let-statement and the current statement. If there were no newlines this
matches the previous behaviour.
Co-authored-by: Ville Penttinen <villem.penttinen@gmail.com>
This fixes#713.
If the block before the statement we want to use introduce var on, had empty
lines these empty lines would also be added between the let-statement and
the current line where the new variable is used.
This fixes that by trimming excess newlines from the start of the indent chunk
and simply adding a single newline (when the chunk had newlines) between the
let-statement and the current statement. If there were no newlines this
matches the previous behaviour.
This fixes#758.
Currently we try to maintain the cursor position relative to the statement under
cursor, if the cursor is inside the dbg! macro call.
Meaning:
let foo = dbg!(some.complex<|>().expression());
Should turn into:
let foo = some.complex<|>().expression();
With the cursor staying in place.
742: Extern crate r=matklad a=flodiebold
This implements `extern crate` declarations by lowering them to (absolute) imports, and adds support for absolute paths. It also extracts the extern prelude from the per-module item map, and handles the special case of extern crates in the crate root adding to the extern prelude.
This means we finally resolve `Arc`, so it fixes#523😄
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>