Percentage is a UI concern, the physical fact here is fraction. It's
sad that percentage bleeds into the protocol level, we even duplicated
this bad API ourselves!
6124: Better normalized crate name usage r=jonas-schievink a=SomeoneToIgnore
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5343
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5932
Uses normalized name for code snippets (to be able to test the fix), hover messages and documentation rewrite links (are there any tests for those?).
Also renamed the field to better resemble the semantics.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
This removes all markdown when the client does not support the markdown MarkupKind
Otherwise the output on the editor will have some markdown boilerplate, making it less readable
This seems like a better factoring logically; ideally, clients shouldn't touch
`set_` methods of the database directly. Additionally, I think this
should remove the unfortunate duplication in fixture code.
6018: Correct project_root path for ProjectJson. r=jonas-schievink a=woody77
It was already the folder containing the rust-project.json file, not the file itself. This also removes the Option-ness of it, since it's now an infallible operation to set the member value.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Wood <aaronwood@google.com>
6036: Don't re-read open files from disk when reloading a workspace r=kjeremy a=lnicola
Fixes#5742Fixes#4263
or so I hope.
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
6017: Don't return any TextEdit if formatting is unchanged r=jonas-schievink a=cuviper
I found that `textDocument/formatting` was always returning a full
`TextEdit` replacement, even when there are no changes, which caused Vim
(w/ vim-lsp) to always indicate a modified buffer after formatting. We
can easily compare whether there were changes and return `null` if not,
so the client knows there's nothing to do.
Co-authored-by: Josh Stone <cuviper@gmail.com>
I found that `textDocument/formatting` was always returning a full
`TextEdit` replacement, even when there are no changes, which caused Vim
(w/ vim-lsp) to always indicate a modified buffer after formatting. We
can easily compare whether there were changes and return `null` if not,
so the client knows there's nothing to do.