Use split_once in FromStr docs
Current implementation:
```rust
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err> {
let coords: Vec<&str> = s.trim_matches(|p| p == '(' || p == ')' )
.split(',')
.collect();
let x_fromstr = coords[0].parse::<i32>()?;
let y_fromstr = coords[1].parse::<i32>()?;
Ok(Point { x: x_fromstr, y: y_fromstr })
}
```
Creating the vector is not necessary, `split_once` does the job better.
Alternatively we could also remove `trim_matches` with `strip_prefix` and `strip_suffix`:
```rust
let (x, y) = s
.strip_prefix('(')
.and_then(|s| s.strip_suffix(')'))
.and_then(|s| s.split_once(','))
.unwrap();
```
The question is how much 'correctness' is too much and distracts from the example. In a real implementation you would also not unwrap (or originally access the vector without bounds checks), but implementing a custom Error and adding a `From<ParseIntError>` and implementing the `Error` trait adds a lot of code to the example which is not relevant to the `FromStr` trait.
Mention first and last macro in backtrace
Slight improvement to diagnostic mentioning what macro an error originates from. Not sure if it's worthwhile.
wf-check generators
fixes#90409
We should not rely on generators being well formed by construction now that they can get used via type alias impl trait (and thus users can choose generic arguments that are invalid). This can cause surprising behaviour if (definitely unsound) transmutes are used, and it's generally saner to just check for well formedness.
proc_macro/bridge: stop using a remote object handle for proc_macro Ident and Literal
This is the fourth part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86822, split off as requested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86822#pullrequestreview-1008655452. This patch transforms the `Ident` and `Group` types into structs serialized over IPC rather than handles.
Symbol values are interned on both the client and server when deserializing, to avoid unnecessary string copies and keep the size of `TokenTree` down. To do the interning efficiently on the client, the proc-macro crate is given a vendored version of the fxhash hasher, as `SipHash` appeared to cause performance issues. This was done rather than depending on `rustc_hash` as it is unfortunately difficult to depend on crates from within `proc_macro` due to it being built at the same time as `std`.
In addition, a custom arena allocator and symbol store was also added, inspired by those in `rustc_arena` and `rustc_span`. To prevent symbol re-use across multiple invocations of a macro on the same thread, a new range of `Symbol` names are used for each invocation of the macro, and symbols from previous invocations are cleaned-up.
In order to keep `Ident` creation efficient, a special ASCII-only case was added to perform ident validation without using RPC for simple identifiers. Full identifier validation couldn't be easily added, as it would require depending on the `rustc_lexer` and `unicode-normalization` crates from within `proc_macro`. Unicode identifiers are validated and normalized using RPC.
See the individual commit messages for more details on trade-offs and design decisions behind these patches.
Currently `#![forbid(unused_qualifications)]` is incompatible with all
derive's because we add `#[allow(unused_qualifications)]` in all
generated impl's.
chore: change str_ref_to_string to str_ref_to_owned
`ToString` is implemented by many different types than `&str`, and represents a serialization into string data. The fact that said data is returned as owned, is an implementation detail resulting from the lack of a parameter for a pre-allocated buffer.
If merely copying borrowed string data to owned string data is all that is desired, `ToOwned` is a much better choice, because if the user later refactors the code such that the input is no longer an `&str`, then they will get a compiler error instead of a mysterious runtime-behavioral change.
- Use `expr.hir_id.owner` instead of `self.tcx.parent_module(expr.hir_id)`
- Use `.type_at()` instead of `.first()` + `.expect_ty()`
- Use single `.find()` with `&&` condition
Co-authored-by: Michael Goulet <michael@errs.io>
Instead of calling `builder.delete` for every text range we find with
`process_usage`, we now ensure that the ranges do not overlap before removing
them. If a range is fully contained by a prior one, it is dropped.
fixes#12784
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98839 (Add assertion that `transmute_copy`'s U is not larger than T)
- #98998 (Remove branch target prologues from `#[naked] fn`)
- #99198 (add missing null ptr check in alloc example)
- #99344 (rustdoc: avoid inlining items with duplicate `(type, name)`)
- #99351 (Use `typeck_results` to get accurate qpath res for arg mismatch error)
- #99378 (interpret/visitor: add missing early return)
- #99394 (Add regression test for #95230)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add simple support for completion item details
Supercedes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/9891
This doesn't yet really implement anything new, it just adds the scaffolding for the protocol conversion
This method is still only used for Literal::subspan, however the
implementation only depends on the Span component, so it is simpler and
more efficient for now to pass down only the information that is needed.
In the future, if more information about the Literal is required in the
implementation (e.g. to validate that spans line up as expected with
source text), that extra information can be added back with extra
arguments.
This builds on the symbol infrastructure built for `Ident` to replicate
the `LitKind` and `Lit` structures in rustc within the `proc_macro`
client, allowing literals to be fully created and interacted with from
the client thread. Only parsing and subspan operations still require
sync RPC.
Bump minimist from 1.2.5 to 1.2.6 in /editors/code
Bumps [minimist](https://github.com/substack/minimist) from 1.2.5 to 1.2.6.
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<li><a href="c2b981977f"><code>c2b9819</code></a> isConstructorOrProto adapted from PR</li>
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Doing this for all unicode identifiers would require a dependency on
`unicode-normalization` and `rustc_lexer`, which is currently not
possible for `proc_macro` due to it being built concurrently with `std`
and `core`. Instead, ASCII identifiers are validated locally, and an RPC
message is used to validate unicode identifiers when needed.
String values are interned on the both the server and client when
deserializing, to avoid unnecessary copies and keep Ident cheap to copy and
move. This appears to be important for performance.
The client-side interner is based roughly on the one from rustc_span, and uses
an arena inspired by rustc_arena.
RPC messages passing symbols always include the full value. This could
potentially be optimized in the future if it is revealed to be a
performance bottleneck.
Despite now having a relevant implementaion of Display for Ident, ToString is
still specialized, as it is a hot-path for this object.
The symbol infrastructure will also be used for literals in the next
part.
Unfortunately, as it is difficult to depend on crates from within proc_macro,
this is done by vendoring a copy of the hasher as a module rather than
depending on the rustc_hash crate.
This probably doesn't have a substantial impact up-front, however will be more
relevant once symbols are interned within the proc_macro client.
fix: make file watcher config a drop-down (and clarify the options)
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/12794
Also renames "notify" to "server", since that's clearer ("notify" is still accepted for compatibility).