This commit adds a function that tries to determine the syntax highlighting class of NAME_REFs based on the usage.
It is used for highlighting injections (such as highlighting of doctests) as the semantic logic will most of the time result in unresolved references.
It also adds a color to unresolved references in HTML encoding.
4860: Accept relative paths in rust-project.json r=matklad a=tweksteen
If a relative path is found as part of Crate.root_module or Root.path, interpret it as relative to the location of the rust-project.json file.
Fixes: #4816
Co-authored-by: Thiébaud Weksteen <tweek@google.com>
4882: _match.rs: improve comment formatting r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
This results in much nicer rustdoc output
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
It's a good idea to distinguish between absolute and relative paths at
the type level, to avoid accidental dependency on the cwd, which
really shouldn't matter for rust-analyzer service
4700: Add top level keywords completion r=matklad a=mcrakhman
This fixes the following issue: https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/4566.
Also added simple logic which filters the keywords which can be used with unsafe on the top level.
Co-authored-by: Mikhail Rakhmanov <rakhmanov.m@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
4857: Fix invalid shorthand initialization diagnostic for tuple structs r=jonas-schievink a=OptimalStrategy
Initializing tuple structs explicitly, like in the example below, produces a "Shorthand struct initialization" diagnostic that leads to a compilation error when applied:
```rust
struct S(usize);
fn main() {
let s = S { 0: 0 }; // OK, but triggers the diagnostic
// let s = S { 0 }; // Compilation error
}
```
This PR adds a check that the field name is not a literal.
Co-authored-by: OptimalStrategy <george@usan-podgornov.com>
Co-authored-by: OptimalStrategy <17456182+OptimalStrategy@users.noreply.github.com>
4833: Separating parsing of `for` in predicates and types r=matklad a=matthewjasper
We now correctly accept `for<'a> (&'a F): Fn(&'a str)` in a where clause and correctly reject `for<'a> &'a u32` as a type.
Co-authored-by: Matthew Jasper <mjjasper1@gmail.com>
4849: Make known paths use `core` instead of `std` r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
I'm not sure if this causes problems today, but it seems like it easily could, if rust-analyzer processes the libstd sources for the right `--target` and that target is a `#![no_std]`-only target.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>