3905: add ellipsis field to hir pat record r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
This PR corrects a `fixme`, adding an `ellipsis` field to the hir `Pat::Record` type. It will also be unlock some useful follow on work for #3894.
Additionally it adds a diagnostic for missing fields in record patterns.
~~Marking as a draft because I don't have any tests, and a small amount of manual testing on my branch from #3894 suggests it might *not* be working. Any thoughts on how I can best test this, or else pointers on where I might be going wrong?~~
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
Chalk now panics if we don't implement these methods and run with CHALK_DEBUG,
so I thought I'd try to implement them 'properly'. Sadly, it seems impossible to
do without transmuting lifetimes somewhere. The problem is that we need a `&dyn
HirDatabase` to get names etc., which we can't just put into TLS. I thought I
could just use `scoped-tls`, but that doesn't support references to unsized
types. So I put the `&dyn` into another struct and put the reference to *that*
into the TLS, but I have to transmute the lifetime to 'static for that to work.
3918: Add support for feature attributes in struct literal r=matklad a=bnjjj
As promised here is the next PR to solve 2 different scenarios with feature flag on struct literal.
close#3870
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Coenen <5719034+bnjjj@users.noreply.github.com>
The big change here is counting binders, not
variables (https://github.com/rust-lang/chalk/pull/360). We have to adapt to the
same scheme for our `Ty::Bound`. It's mostly fine though, even makes some things
more clear.
We treat macro calls as expressions (there's appropriate Into impl),
which causes problem if there's expresison and non-expression macro in
the same node (like in the match arm).
We fix this problem by nesting macor patterns into another node (the
same way we nest path into PathExpr or PathPat). Ideally, we probably
should add a similar nesting for macro expressions, but that needs
some careful thinking about macros in blocks: `{ am_i_expression!() }`.
It improves compile time in `--release` mode quite a bit, it doesn't
really slow things down and, conceptually, it seems closer to what we
want the physical architecture to look like (we don't want to
monomorphise EVERYTHING in a single leaf crate).