5639: SSR: Allow `self` in patterns. r=jonas-schievink a=davidlattimore
It's now consistent with other variables in that if the pattern references self, only the `self` in scope where the rule is invoked will be accepted. Since `self` doesn't work the same as other paths, this is implemented by restricting the search to just the current function. Prior to this change (since path resolution was implemented), having self in a pattern would just result in no matches.
Co-authored-by: David Lattimore <dml@google.com>
5664: Fix renamed self module. r=jonas-schievink a=Nashenas88
Fixes#5663
Now `inner_mod` below is properly marked as a `module`.
```rust
use crate::inner::{self as inner_mod};
mod inner {}
```
Co-authored-by: Paul Daniel Faria <Nashenas88@users.noreply.github.com>
`current_dir` and relative paths to executables works differently on
unix and windows (unix behavior does not make sense), see:
17e30e83a1/src/lib.rs (L295-L324)
The original motivation to set cwd was to make rustfmt read the
correct rustfmt.toml, but that was future proofing, rather than a bug
fix.
So, let's just remove this and see if breaks or fixes more use-cases.
If support for per-file config is needed, we could use `--config-path`
flag.
5658: do not add to `pub use` in assists that insert a use statement r=jonas-schievink a=jbr
closes#5657 , see issue for rationale
Initially I wrote a version of this that changed the signature of `insert_use_statement` to take an `Option<VisibilityKind>` and only add to use statements with the same visibility, but that didn't make sense for any of the current uses of `insert_use_statement` (they all expected private visibility).
Co-authored-by: Jacob Rothstein <hi@jbr.me>
It's now consistent with other variables in that if the pattern
references self, only the `self` in scope where the rule is invoked will
be accepted. Since `self` doesn't work the same as other paths, this is
implemented by restricting the search to just the current function.
Prior to this change (since path resolution was implemented), having
self in a pattern would just result in no matches.
Note that `for` type is rust-analyzer's own invention.
Both the reference and syn allow `for` only for fnptr types, and we
allow them everywhere. This needs to be checked with respect to type
bounds grammar...