`generated_marker_line_search_limit` allows users to configure how many
lines rustfmt should search for an `@generated` marker comment when
`format_generated_files=false`
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Eldredge <jordan@jordaneldredge.com>
This allows users to configure the maximum length of a single line
`let-else` statements. `let-else` statements that otherwise meet the
requirements to be formatted on a single line will have their divergent
`else` block formatted over multiple lines if they exceed this length.
**Note**: `single_line_let_else_max_widt` will be introduced as a stable
configuration option.
This renames the existing `true`/`false` options to `Crate`/`Never`, then adds a
new `Module` option which causes imports to be grouped together by their
originating module.
We no longer flatten a block that looks like this:
```rust
match val {
pat => { macro_call!() }
}
```
Currently, rust ignores trailing semicolons in macro expansion in
expression position (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/33953)
If this is changed, flattening a block with a macro call may break the
user's code - the trailing semicolon will no longer parse if the macro
call occurs immediately on the right-hand side of the match arm
(e.g. `pat => macro_call!()`)
When either one of these two options are set to `true`, each should take
precedence over the brace_style option.
This commit does not introduce any formatting change to the default
configuration, so no version gate is required.
If we're only aligning enum discriminants that are "not too far apart
(length-wise)", then this works really well for enums with
consistently-long or consistently-short idents, but not for the mixed
ones.
However, consistently-long idents is somewhate of an uncommon case and
overlong idents may be allowed to be formatted suboptimally if that
makes mixed-length idents work better (and it does in this case).