3925: Implement assist "Reorder field names" r=matklad a=geoffreycopin
This PR implements the "Reorder record fields" assist as discussed in issue #3821 .
Adding a `RecordFieldPat` variant to the `Pat` enum seemed like the easiest way to handle the `RecordPat` children as a single sequence of elements, maybe there is a better way ?
Co-authored-by: Geoffrey Copin <copin.geoffrey@gmail.com>
todo!() "Indicates unfinished code" (https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.todo.html)
Rust documentation provides further clarification:
> The difference between unimplemented! and todo! is that while todo!
> conveys an intent of implementing the functionality later and the
> message is "not yet implemented", unimplemented! makes no such claims.
todo!() seems more appropriate for assists that insert missing impls.
3746: Add create_function assist r=flodiebold a=TimoFreiberg
The function part of #3639, creating methods will come later
- [X] Function arguments
- [X] Function call arguments
- [x] Method call arguments
- [x] Literal arguments
- [x] Variable reference arguments
- [X] Migrate to `ast::make` API
Done, but there are some ugly spots.
Issues to handle in another PR:
- function reference arguments: Their type isn't printed properly right now.
The "insert explicit type" assist has the same issue and this is probably a relatively rare usecase.
- generating proper names for all kinds of argument expressions (if, loop, ...?)
Without this, it's totally possible for the assist to generate invalid argument names.
I think the assist it's already helpful enough to be shipped as it is, at least for me the main usecase involves passing in named references.
Besides, the Rust tooling ecosystem is immature enough that some janky behaviour in a new assist probably won't scare anyone off.
- select the generated placeholder body so it's a bit easier to overwrite it
- create method (`self.foo<|>(..)` or `some_foo.foo<|>(..)`) instead of create_function.
The main difference would be finding (or creating) the impl block and inserting the `self` argument correctly
- more specific default arg names for literals.
So far, every generated argument whose name can't be taken from the call site is called `arg` (with a number suffix if necessary).
- creating functions in another module of the same crate.
E.g. when typing `some_mod::foo<|>(...)` when in `lib.rs`, I'd want to have `foo` generated in `some_mod.rs` and jump there.
Issues: the mod could exist in `some_mod.rs`, in `lib.rs` as `mod some_mod`, or inside another mod but be imported via `use other_mod::some_mod`.
- refer to arguments of the generated function with a qualified path if the types aren't imported yet
(alternative: run autoimport. i think starting with a qualified path is cleaner and there's already an assist to replace a qualified path with an import and an unqualified path)
- add type arguments of the arguments to the generated function
- Autocomplete functions with information from unresolved calls (see https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/3746#issuecomment-605281323)
Issues: see https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/3746#issuecomment-605282542. The unresolved call could be anywhere. But just offering this autocompletion for unresolved calls in the same module would already be cool.
Co-authored-by: Timo Freiberg <timo.freiberg@gmail.com>
3700: fill match arms with empty block rather than unit tuple r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
As requested by @Veetaha in #3689 and #3687, this modifies the fill match arms assist to create match arms as an empty block `{}` rather than a unit tuple `()`.
In one test I left one of the pre-existing match arms as a unit tuple, and added a body to another match arm, to demonstrate that the contents of existing match arms persist.
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
Add setting to allow enabling either type inlay hints or parameter
inlay hints or both. Group the the max inlay hint length option
into the object.
- Add a new type for the inlayHint options.
- Add tests to ensure the inlays don't happen on the server side
The new name seems much simpler and it doesn't limit
this config value only to downloading the server binary.
Thus we wouldn't need to create another config
properties to handle other downloads whatsoever.
Anyway, I believe (heuristically) that most of the users
would want to set "askBeforeDownload": false once
and never bother clicking on the notification again
(because otherwise there is no big point in installing rust-analyzer if it cannot install the server)
3053: Feature: downloading lsp server from GitHub r=matklad a=Veetaha
This is currently very WIP, I may need to change this and that, add "download language server command", logging stuff (for future bug reports), etc., but it already works.
Also didn't test this on windows yet and mac (don't have the latter)
The quirks:
* Downloaded binary doesn't have executable permissions by default, that's why we ~~`chmod 111`~~ (**[UPD]** `chmod 755` as per @lnicola [suggestion](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/3053#discussion_r376694456)) for it.
* To remove installed binary run `rm /${HOME}/.config/Code/User/globalStorage/matklad.rust-analyzer/ra_lsp_server-linux`, ~~note that `-f` flag is necessary, because of `111` permissions (I think this should be changed)~~ (**[UPD]** --force is no longer needed due to 755 permissions).
I also tried to keep things simple and not to use too many dependencies, all the ones added have 0 dependencies, (`ts-not-nil` is my personal npm package, that imitates `unwrap()` in TypeScript)
**[UPD]** I reduced throttle latency of progress indicator to 200ms for smoother UX
// TODO:
- [x] ~~Add `Rust Analyzer: Download latest language server` vscode command.~~ **[UPD]**: having reviewed the code and estimated available options I concluded that this feature requires too many code changes, I'd like to extract this into a separate PR after we merge this one.
- [x] Add some logging for future debugging
- [x] ~~Gracefully handle the case when language server is not available (e.g. no internet connection, user explicitly rejected the download, etc.)~~ **[UPD]** Decided to postpone better implementation of graceful degradation logic as per [conversation](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/185405-t-compiler.2Fwg-rls-2.2E0/topic/Deployment.20and.20installation/near/187758550).
Demo (**[UPD]** this is a bit outdated, but still mainly reflects the feature):
![ra-github-release-download-mvp](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/36276403/74077961-4f248a80-4a2d-11ea-962f-27c650fd6c4c.gif)
Related issue: #2988#3007
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <gerzoh1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <veetaha2@gmail.com>
2061: Theme loading and "editor.tokenColorCustomizations" support. r=matklad a=seivan
Fixes: [Issue#1294](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/1294#issuecomment-497450325)
TODO:
- [x] Load themes
- [x] Load existing `ralsp`-prefixed overrides from `"workbench.colorCustomizations"`.
- [x] Load overrides from `"editor.tokenColorCustomizations.textMateRules"`.
- [x] Use RA tags to load `vscode.DecorationRenderOptions` (colors) from theme & overrides.
- [x] Map RA tags to common TextMate scopes before loading colors.
- [x] Add default scope mappings in extension.
- [x] Cache mappings between settings updates.
- [x] Add scope mapping configuration manifest in `package.json`
- [x] Load configurable scope mappings from settings.
- [x] Load JSON Scheme for text mate scope rules in settings.
- [x] Update [Readme](https://github.com/seivan/rust-analyzer/blob/feature/themes/docs/user/README.md#settings).
Borrowed the theme loading (`scopes.ts`) from `Tree Sitter` with some modifications to reading `"editor.tokenColorCustomizations"` for merging with loaded themes and had to remove the async portions to be able to load it from settings updates.
~Just a PoC and an idea I toyed around with a lot of room for improvement.~
For starters, certain keywords aren't part of the standard TextMate grammar, so it still reads colors from the `ralsp` prefixed values in `"workbench.colorCustomizations"`.
But I think there's more value making the extension work with existing themes by maping some of the decoration tags to existing key or keys.
<img width="453" alt="Screenshot 2019-11-09 at 17 43 18" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/55424/68531968-71b4e380-0318-11ea-924e-cdbb8d5eae06.png">
<img width="780" alt="Screenshot 2019-11-09 at 17 41 45" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/55424/68531950-4b8f4380-0318-11ea-8f85-24a84efaf23b.png">
<img width="468" alt="Screenshot 2019-11-09 at 17 40 29" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/55424/68531952-51852480-0318-11ea-800a-6ae9215f5368.png">
These will merge with the default ones coming with the extension, so you don't have to implement all of them and works well with overrides defined in settings.
```jsonc
"editor.tokenColorCustomizations": {
"textMateRules": [
{
"scope": "keyword",
"settings": {
"fontStyle": "bold",
}
},
]
},
```
Edit: The idea is to work with 90% of the themes out there by working within existing scopes available that are generally styled. It's not to say I want to erase the custom Rust scopes - those should still remain and eventually worked into a custom grammar bundle for Rust specific themes that target those, I just want to make it work with generic themes offered on the market place for now.
A custom grammar bundle and themes for Rust specific scopes is out of... scope for this PR.
We'll make another round to tackle those issues.
Current fallbacks implemented
```typescript
[
'comment',
[
'comment',
'comment.block',
'comment.line',
'comment.block.documentation'
]
],
['string', ['string']],
['keyword', ['keyword']],
['keyword.control', ['keyword.control', 'keyword', 'keyword.other']],
[
'keyword.unsafe',
['storage.modifier', 'keyword.other', 'keyword.control', 'keyword']
],
['function', ['entity.name.function']],
['parameter', ['variable.parameter']],
['constant', ['constant', 'variable']],
['type', ['entity.name.type']],
['builtin', ['variable.language', 'support.type', 'support.type']],
['text', ['string', 'string.quoted', 'string.regexp']],
['attribute', ['keyword']],
['literal', ['string', 'string.quoted', 'string.regexp']],
['macro', ['support.other']],
['variable', ['variable']],
['variable.mut', ['variable', 'storage.modifier']],
[
'field',
[
'variable.object.property',
'meta.field.declaration',
'meta.definition.property',
'variable.other'
]
],
['module', ['entity.name.section', 'entity.other']]
```
Co-authored-by: Seivan Heidari <seivan.heidari@icloud.com>
2018: assists: add assist for custom implementation for derived trait r=matklad a=paulolieuthier
Please, tell me if something could be more idiomatic or efficient.
Fixes#1256.
Co-authored-by: Paulo Lieuthier <paulolieuthier@gmail.com>
In particular it is necessary to clone the repository before running the other commands. I also removed the `cargo install` side note because it didn't actually work (running the command just produces an error that --package isn't a recognized flag) and added a tldr code block with the list of commands to run.
2343: implement assist invert_if r=matklad a=bravomikekilo
fix [issue 2219 invert if condition](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/2219)
I put the assist cursor range to `if` of the if expression, because both condition and body will be replaced. Is there any way to replace them without cover the cursor position?
@matklad
Co-authored-by: bravomikekilo <bmk1221@126.com>
2165: ra_assists: Add add_new assist r=matklad a=rep-nop
Adds a new assist to autogenerate a new fn based on the selected struct, excluding tuple structs and unions. The fn will inherit the same visibility as the struct and the assist will attempt to reuse any existing impl blocks that exist at the same level of struct.
Not marking this as closing #1644 since there's a part 2 of adding autocompletion for when someone starts typing `[pub ]fn new(...`
Co-authored-by: Wesley Norris <repnop@outlook.com>
Adds a new assist to autogenerate a new fn based on the selected struct,
excluding tuple structs and unions. The fn will inherit the same
visibility as the struct and the assist will attempt to reuse any
existing impl blocks that exist at the same level of struct.
1952: Create an assist for applying De Morgan's Law r=matklad a=cronokirby
Fixes#1807
This assist can transform expressions of the form `!x || !y` into
`!(x && y)`. This also works with `&&`.
This assist will only trigger if the cursor is on the central logical
operator.
The main limitation of this current implementation is that both operands
need to be an explicit negation, either of the form `!x`, or `x != y`.
More operands could be accepted, but this would complicate the implementation
quite a bit.
Co-authored-by: Lúcás Meier <cronokirby@gmail.com>
1. `command` has been added to change the default cargo-watch command
2. `check-arguments` has been renamed to `arguments` as a consequence
Thoses changes were merged in #1434
This appears to have been introduced ages ago in
be742a5877
but has since been removed.
As it stands, it is problematic if multiple instances of the
rust-analyzer LSP are launched during the same VS Code session because
VS Code complains about multiple LSP servers trying to register the
same command.
Most LSP servers workaround this by parameterizing the command by the
process id. For example, this is where `rls` does this:
ff0b9057c8/rls/src/server/mod.rs (L413-L421)
Though `apply_code_action` does not seems to be used, so it seems better
to delete it than to parameterize it.
Can be used like this:
```
$ cargo run --release -p ra_cli -- \
analysis-bench ../chalk/ \
--complete ../chalk/chalk-engine/src/logic.rs:94:0
loading: 225.970093ms
from scratch: 8.492373325s
no change: 445.265µs
trivial change: 95.631242ms
```
Or like this:
```
$ cargo run --release -p ra_cli -- \
analysis-bench ../chalk/ \
--highlight ../chalk/chalk-engine/src/logic.rs
loading: 209.873484ms
from scratch: 9.504916942s
no change: 7.731119ms
trivial change: 124.984039ms
```
"from scratch" includes initial analysis of the relevant bits of the
project
"no change" just asks the same question for the second time. It
measures overhead on assembling the answer outside of salsa.
"trivial change" doesn't do an actual salsa change, it just advances
the revision. This test how fast is salsa at validating things.