Very simple approach: For each identifier, set the hash of the range
where it's defined as its 'id' and use it in the VSCode extension to
generate unique colors.
Thus, the generated colors are per-file. They are also quite fragile,
and I'm not entirely sure why. Looks like we need to make sure the
same ranges aren't overwritten by a later request?
As tested by @edwin0cheng, Windows requires the quotes removed in the
previous commit. This commit re-adds the quotes gated by an if statement
on the node environment, so that quotes are only added on Windows.
As of #1079 the VSCode cargo-watch functionality has been broken on
Linux systems.
The cause seems to be that linux takes the added quotes inside process
arguments literally, so it attempts to make cargo-watch run the command
`cargo "check --message-format json"` with the entire quoted part being
treated as a single long subcommand, which cargo doesn't know how to
handle.
Removing the extra quotes solves the issue.
This fixes#1005.
Defaults to `ask` which prompts users each time whether to start `cargo watch`
or not. `enabled` always starts `cargo watch` and `disabled` does not.
This allows users to control whether or not they want to see the "workspace
loaded" notification.
This is done on the server side using InitializationOptions which are provided
by the client. By default show_workspace_loaded is true, meaning the
notification is sent.
Previously when using the file based syntax tree, it would not update until a
change had been made in the new file. Now we automatically update the syntax
tree to match the current file.