editor/code: add option to suppress error notifications
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/14193
- Added the `rust-analyzer.showRequestFailedErrorNotification` configuration option, which defaults to `true`
- If `rust-analyzer.showRequestFailedErrorNotification` is set to `true`, the current behavior is preserved.
- If `rust-analyzer.showRequestFailedErrorNotification` is set to `false`, no error toasts will be displayed for any of the failed requests caused by panics in r-a. This _only_ applies to events that are triggered "implicitly", such as `textDocument/hover`.
To test this, you can manually introduce a panic in one of the language server LSP handlers for non-command events. I added an explicit `panic!()` in the `textDocument/hover` event handler:
#### `rust-analyzer.showRequestFailedErrorNotification` set to `true` (default)
[2023-11-07 17-17-48.webm](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/1665677/d0408ab8-79d1-42cf-a4e7-94e99d9783ec)
#### `rust-analyzer.showRequestFailedErrorNotification` set to `false`
[2023-11-07 17-16-49.webm](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/1665677/0496d8d0-fb53-4bc6-a279-1a47f412dbdb)
minor: Make "Expand macro" command title more explicit
Closes [#15856](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15856).
I opted for "caret", since it's the better term (cursor is the mouse), but I'm not sure how popular it is these days.
Adds a Rust Analyzer configuration option to set a custom
target directory for builds. This is a workaround for Rust Analyzer
blocking debug builds while running `cargo check`. This change
should close#6007
When building the Rust compiler with `./x check` from within VS Code,
the current `rustc` problem matcher thinks that the output from that
command that looks like this:
Build completed successfully in 0:00:26
is about a problem in a file named `0` on line 00, col 26. This wouldn't
be so bad if it wasn't for that VS Code tends to get stuck on this
problem because of problems with opening the file '0'.
The rust compiler will never output problems with a line or a column
that starts with 0, so change the regexp to require lines and cols to
begin with [1-9] to fix this problem.
extend check.overrideCommand and buildScripts.overrideCommand docs
Extend check.overrideCommand and buildScripts.overrideCommand docs regarding invocation strategy and location.
However something still seems a bit odd -- the docs for `invocationStrategy`/`invocationLocation` talk about "workspaces", but the setting that controls which workspaces are considered is called `linkedProjects`. Is a project the same as a workspace here or is there some subtle difference?
To do this change, we reorganize npm-script.
| previous | after |
|--------------------|----------------------------------------|
| `npm run lint` | `npm run lint && npm run format:check` |
| `npm run fix` | `npm run lint:fix && npm run format` |
The previous `npm run fix` sometimes does not complete fix automatically
because ESLint's autofix doees not follow prettier's formatting.
So we need to run `npm run lint:fix && npm run format` by this order.
editor/code: Use `@tsconfig/strictest` to define type checking rules
Motivation
-----------
This change aims to make it easier to manage tsconfig by [``@tsconfig/strictest`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@tsconfig/strictest)` and intend to leave to create "ideal" rules about TypeScript's type checking.
Implementation
---------------
This change removes some duplicated rules defined in ``@tsconfig/strictest`` and add disabing some strict rules that fails with the current codebase.
Motivation
-----------
This change aims to make it easier to manage tsconfig.
This intend to leave to create "ideal" rules about TypeScript's type checking.
Implementation
---------------
This change removes some duplicated rules defined in `@tsconfig/strictest` and add disabing some strict rules
that fails with the current codebase.