internal: Format let-else
As nightly finally got support for it I went ahead and formatted r-a with the latest nightly, then with the latest stable (in case other stuff changed)
Clean up `ImportMap`
There are several things in `hir_def::import_map` that are never used. This PR removes them and restructures the code. Namely:
- Removes `Query::name_only`, because it's *always* true.
- Because of this, we never took advantage of storing items' full path. This PR removes `ImportPath` and changes `ImportInfo` to only store items' name, which should reduce the memory consumption to some extent.
- Removes `SearchMode::Contains` for `Query` because it's never used.
- Merges `Query::assoc_items_only` and `Query::exclude_import_kinds` into `Query::assoc_mode`, because the latter is never used besides filtering associated items out.
Best reviewed one commit at a time. I made sure each commit passes full test suite. I can squash the first three commits if needed.
Use anonymous lifetime where possible
Because anonymous lifetimes are *super* cool.
More seriously, I believe anonymous lifetimes, especially those in impl headers, reduce cognitive load to a certain extent because they usually signify that they are not relevant in the signature of the methods within (or that we can apply the usual lifetime elision rules even if they are relevant).
Fix runnable detection for `#[tokio::test]`
fix#15141
It is hacky, and it wouldn't work for e.g. this case:
```Rust
use ::core::prelude;
#[prelude::v1::test]
fn foo() {
}
```
But it works for the tokio case. We should use the name resolution here somehow, and after that we should probably also get rid of the ast based `test_related_attribute` function.
Fix: a TODO and some clippy fixes
- fix(todo): implement IntoIterator for ArenaMap<IDX, V>
- chore: remove unused method
- fix: remove useless `return`s
- fix: various clippy lints
- fix: simplify boolean test to a single negation
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.
Support `#[macro_use(name, ...)]`
This PR adds support for another form of the `macro_use` attribute: `#[macro_use(name, ...)]` ([reference]).
Note that this form of the attribute is only applicable to extern crate decls, not to mod decls.
[reference]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/macros-by-example.html#the-macro_use-attribute
Parse associated return type bounds
This PR implements parser support for associated return type bounds: `T: Foo<bar(): Send>`. This PR does not implement associated return types (`T::bar(): Send`) because it's not implemented even in rustc, and also removes `(..)`-style return type notation because it has been removed in rust-lang/rust#110203 (effectively reverting #14465).
I don't plan to proactively follow this unstable feature unless an RFC is accepted and my main motivation here is to remove no-longer-valid syntax `(..)` from our parser, nevertheless adding minimal parser support so anyone interested (as can be seen in #14465) can experiment it without rust-analyzer's syntax errors.
Expand more single ident macro calls upon item collection
Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/14781#issuecomment-1546201022
I believe this (almost) brings the number of unresolved names back to pre-#14781:
|r-a version|`analysis-stats compiler/rustc` (rust-lang/rust@69fef92ab2) |
|---|---|
|pre-#14781 (b069eb720b) | exprs: 2747778, ??ty: 122236 (4%), ?ty: 107826 (3%), !ty: 728 |
| #14781 (a7944a93a1) | exprs: 2713080, ??ty: 139651 (5%), ?ty: 114444 (4%), !ty: 730 |
| with this fix | exprs: 2747871, ??ty: 122237 (4%), ?ty: 108171 (3%), !ty: 676 |
(I haven't investigated on the increase in some numbers but hopefully not too much of a problem)
This is only a temporary solution. The core problem is that we haven't fully implemented the textual scope of legacy macros. For example, we *have been* failing to resolve `foo` in the following snippet, even before #14781 or after this patch. As noted in a FIXME, we need a way to resolve names in textual scope without eager expansion during item collection.
```rust
//- /main.rs crate:main deps:lib
lib::mk_foo!();
const A: i32 = foo!();
//^^^^^^ unresolved-macro-call
//- /lib.rs crate:lib
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! mk_foo {
() => {
macro_rules! foo { () => { 42 } }
}
}
```
We've already removed non-sysroot proc macro server, which effectively
removed support for Rust <1.64.0, so this removal of fallback path
shouldn't be problem at this point.
This function/lang_item was introduced in #104321 as a temporary workaround of future lowering.
The usage and need for it went away in #104833.
After a bootstrap update, the function itself can be removed from `std`.
More core::fmt::rt cleanup.
- Removes the `V1` suffix from the `Argument` and `Flag` types.
- Moves more of the format_args lang items into the `core::fmt::rt` module. (The only remaining lang item in `core::fmt` is `Arguments` itself, which is a public type.)
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99012
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110616
fix: Fix pat fragment handling in 2021 edition
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/9055
The fix isn't that great, but we are kind of forced to do it the quick and hacky way right now since std has changed the `matches` macro to make use of this now. And for a proper fix we need to track hygiene for identifiers which is a long way off anyways
fix: Resolve `$crate` in derive paths
Paths in derive meta item list may contain any kind of paths, including those that start with `$crate` generated by macros. We need to take hygiene into account when we lower paths in the list.
This issue was identified while investigating #14607, though this patch doesn't fix the broken trait resolution.
internal: Report macro definition errors on the definition
We still report them on the call site as well for the time being, and the diagnostic doesn't know where the error in the definition comes from, but that can be done later on