11000: fix: insert whitespaces into assoc items for assist when macro generated r=Veykril a=Veykril
This is obviously only a temporary hack which still produces ugly looking items, but as long as the syntax is valid one can at least have rustfmt fix the formatting again.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6588
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
10956: minor: Bump deps r=Veykril a=lnicola
bors r+
10986: fix: Fix lint completions not working for unclosed attributes r=Veykril a=Veykril
Fixes#10682
Uses keywords and nested `TokenTree`s as a heuristic to figure out when to stop parsing in case the attribute is unclosed which should work pretty well as attributes are usually followed by either of those.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
10976: fix: Show case-insensitive exact matches instead of fuzzy flyimport for short paths r=Veykril a=Veykril
And raise the fuzzy trigger from 2 to 3 chars. This way we keep the ability of flyimporting short names like `Rc`.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6917
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
10809: fix: don't discard formatting of `use` lines r=Veykril a=iDawer
Use mutable syntax trees in `merge_imports`, `split_imports`. This tries to resolve#9013. But I haven't much managed to simplify code of merging.
Also resolve#9361. It reuses a use tree under the cursor so that comments+indentation are preserved. Merged trees are just appended to the end.
This touches bunch of tests. I removed the sorting of use trees as it needs a proper implementation that takes into account comments and line wrapping. I think it is rustfmt's job or at least until we get a close implementation.
Co-authored-by: iDawer <ilnur.iskhakov.oss@outlook.com>
10603: fix: Don't resolve attributes to non attribute macros r=Veykril a=Veykril
Also changes `const`s to `static`s for `Limit`s as we have interior mutability in those(though only used with a certain feature flag enabled).
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
10563: feat: Make "Generate getter" assist use semantic info r=agluszak a=agluszak
This PR makes "Generate getter" assist use semantic info instead of dealing with types encoded as strings.
Getters for types which are:
- `Copy` no longer return references
- `AsRef<str>` (i.e. `String`) return `&str` (instead of `&String`)
- `AsRef<[T]>` (i.e. `Vec<T>`) return `&[T]` (instead of `&Vec<T>`)
- `AsRef<T>` (i.e. `Box<T>`) return `&T` (instead of `&Box<T>`)
- `Option<T>` return `Option<&T>` (instead of `&Option<T>`)
- `Result<T, E>` return `Result<&T, &E>` (instead of `&Result<T, E>`)
String, Vec, Box and Option were previously handled as special cases.
Closes#10295
Co-authored-by: Andrzej Głuszak <gluszak.andrzej@gmail.com>
This renames `descend_into_macros` to `descend_into_macros_single` and `descend_into_macros_many` into `descend_into_macros`.
However, this does not touch a function in `SemanticsImpl` of same name.
10440: Fix Clippy warnings and replace some `if let`s with `match` r=Veykril a=arzg
I decided to try fixing a bunch of Clippy warnings. I am aware of this project’s opinion of Clippy (I have read both [rust-lang/clippy#5537](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5537) and [rust-analyzer/rowan#57 (comment)](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rowan/pull/57#discussion_r415676159)), so I totally understand if part of or the entirety of this PR is rejected. In particular, I can see how the semicolons and `if let` vs `match` commits provide comparatively little benefit when compared to the ensuing churn.
I tried to separate each kind of change into its own commit to make it easier to discard certain changes. I also only applied Clippy suggestions where I thought they provided a definite improvement to the code (apart from semicolons, which is IMO more of a formatting/consistency question than a linting question). In the end I accumulated a list of 28 Clippy lints I ignored entirely.
Sidenote: I should really have asked about this on Zulip before going through all 1,555 `if let`s in the codebase to decide which ones definitely look better as `match` :P
Co-authored-by: Aramis Razzaghipour <aramisnoah@gmail.com>
Consider these expples
{ 92 }
async { 92 }
'a: { 92 }
#[a] { 92 }
Previously the tree for them were
BLOCK_EXPR
{ ... }
EFFECT_EXPR
async
BLOCK_EXPR
{ ... }
EFFECT_EXPR
'a:
BLOCK_EXPR
{ ... }
BLOCK_EXPR
#[a]
{ ... }
As you see, it gets progressively worse :) The last two items are
especially odd. The last one even violates the balanced curleys
invariant we have (#10357) The new approach is to say that the stuff in
`{}` is stmt_list, and the block is stmt_list + optional modifiers
BLOCK_EXPR
STMT_LIST
{ ... }
BLOCK_EXPR
async
STMT_LIST
{ ... }
BLOCK_EXPR
'a:
STMT_LIST
{ ... }
BLOCK_EXPR
#[a]
STMT_LIST
{ ... }