11915: fix: Attempt to resolve paths in const arguments heuristically in IDE layer r=Veykril a=Veykril
While we don't support const args in type inference yet, we can at least
make use of the fallback path resolution to resolve paths in const args
in the IDE layer to enable some features for them.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
While we don't support const args in type inference yet, we can at least
make use of the fallback path resolution to resolve paths in const args
in the IDE layer to enable some features for them.
11905: internal: Remove hir_expand macro recursion check r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This check is insufficient to ensure finite macro nesting, and so all callers already have their own recursion limit, which makes this check redundant.
...at least I hope it's redundant. Would be great if someone could double-check this.
Originally, this check was added in https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/3671
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
11891: Better error message on Flycheck Error message (from: unactionable error message if we are using `clippy` as the checker) r=Veykril a=flipbit03
I have commented on this [S-unactionable issue](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6589) that the Flycheck error message should maybe provide a hint about what tool it actually runs. Searching on some places on the Internet I've found multiple people, including myself, losing copious amounts of time on the same issue. So I've decided to make this very small PR :-)
From an user experience standpoint, the current error message is unhelpful to the end user, because the end user does not know exactly what it needs to check/fix (outdated, broken, or missing `cargo clippy`). In my own case, `cargo clippy` was actually missing altogether (developing off `rust:1.59.0-bullseye` official Docker image).
Thanks in advance!
Co-authored-by: Cadu <cadu.coelho@gmail.com>
11904: internal: Wrap macros in expr position in `MacroExpr` node r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This lets us distinguish them from macros in item position just by looking at the syntax tree.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/11854
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
11899: fix: Skip match check on patterns of unexpected TyKind::FnDef r=Veykril a=iDawer
Match checking does not expect patterns of `TyKind::FnDef` type.
It seems that in _rustc_ match checking is ruled out due to such type errors at the typecheck stage.
Spotted in #11319
Co-authored-by: iDawer <ilnur.iskhakov.oss@outlook.com>
11896: fix: Show the path to be created in the unresolved-module fix label r=Veykril a=Veykril
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
11894: complete pattern args based on type name r=Veykril a=cameron1024
Addresses #11892
Changes function argument completion to cover a case like this:
```rust
struct Foo { bar: i32 }
fn qux(Foo { bar }: Foo) {
println!("{bar}");
}
```
When completing the function call for `qux`, instead of expanding to `qux(_)`, it will now expand to `qux(foo)` (based on the snake-cased version of the name of the ADT)
Non ADTs are unaffected
Co-authored-by: cameron <cameron.studdstreet@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: cameron1024 <cameron.studdstreet@gmail.com>
11865: Fix: Select correct insert position for disabled group import r=jonasbb a=jonasbb
The logic for importing with and without `group_imports` differed
significantly when no previous group existed. This lead to the problem
of using the wrong position when importing inside a module (#11585) or
when inner attributes are involved.
The existing code for grouped imports is better and takes these things
into account.
This PR changes the flow to use the pre-existing code for adding a new
import group even for the non-grouped import settings.
Some coverage markers are updated and the `group` is removed, since they
are now invoked in both cases (grouping and no grouping).
Tests are updated and two tests (empty module and inner attribute) are
added.
Fixes#11585
Co-authored-by: Jonas Bushart <jonas@bushart.org>
11699: feat: assist to remove unneeded `async`s r=Ethiraric a=Ethiraric
This should fix#11392
This PR adds a quickfix on functions marked with `async` that suggests, if and only if no `await` expression in find in the body of the function (it relies on `SyntaxNode::descendants()` to recursively traverse blocks), to remove the `async` keyword.
The lint is made so that it triggers only if the cursor is not in the body of the function, so that it does not pollute the quickfix list.
It does not trigger a diagnostic. I don't know if this repository is the place to implement those (`clippy`?). If it is, I would very much like pointers on where to start looking.
If there are test cases I haven't thought about, please do suggest.
Co-authored-by: Ethiraric <ethiraric@gmail.com>
10802: Allow clients to configure the global workspace search limit r=Veykril a=knutwalker
Playing around with [helix](https://helix-editor.com) I realized that the global worksapce symbol search works different compared to vs-code.
Helix requires all possible symbols in one query and does no subsequent refinement searched.
This PR adds a configuration option to override the default search limit with the default being the currently hardocded value.
Helix users can increment this limit for their instance with a config like
```toml
[[language]]
name = "rust"
language-server = { command = "rust-analyzer" }
[language.config]
workspace = { symbol = { search = { limit = 65536 }}}
```
Other editors are not affected by this change.
Co-authored-by: Paul Horn <dev@knutwalker.engineer>
11866: fix: Prevent underflow in range conversion r=Veykril a=skyfmmf
Previously, when line numbers of Rust spans were converted to LSP ranges, they could underflow resulting in very large line numbers. As an underflow is always wrong, prevent it and use 0 instead.
This was noticed when opening an empty file in `src/bin/` of a library crate. In this case rustc produces a span with `"line_start": 0, "line_end": 0` resulting in the underflow.
Co-authored-by: Felix Maurer <felix@felix-maurer.de>
11886: add test for postfix completion relevance r=matklad a=matklad
Follow up to #11857, add a test and cov-marks
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
11879: Suggest infered type in auto complete r=HKalbasi a=HKalbasi
fix#11855
It doesn't work for return types and consts (so their tests are failing) because I can't find their body node in the original file. (Are these original and fake file documented somewhere?)
Also it currently needs to type first character of the type (or manual ctrl+space) to open the auto complete panel, is it possible to open it automatically on typing `:` and `->`?
Co-authored-by: hkalbasi <hamidrezakalbasi@protonmail.com>
11877: fix: splitting path of a glob import wrongly adds `self` r=Veykril a=iDawer
Close #11703
`ast::UseTree::split_prefix` handles globs now.
Removed an extra branch for globs in `ide_db::imports::merge_imports::recursive_merge` (superseeded by split_prefix).
Co-authored-by: iDawer <ilnur.iskhakov.oss@outlook.com>
11881: fix: Don't rely on lang items to find primitive impls r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
rustc has removed the use of lang items to mark the primitive impls, so just look through the crate graph for them (this should be fine performance-wise since we cache the crates that contain these impls).
Fixes#11876.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
rustc has removed the use of lang items to mark the primitive impls, so
just look through the crate graph for them (this should be fine
performance-wise since we cache the crates that contain these impls).
Fixes#11876.