rust/crates/rust-analyzer
bors[bot] 848aa56df5
Merge #4397
4397: Textmate cooperation r=matklad a=georgewfraser

This PR tweaks the fallback TextMate scopes to make them more consistent with the existing grammar and other languages, and edits the builtin TextMate grammar to align with semantic coloring. Before is on the left, after is on the right:

<img width="855" alt="Screen Shot 2020-05-10 at 1 45 51 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1369240/81512320-a8be7e80-92d4-11ea-8940-2c03f6769015.png">

**Use keyword.other for regular keywords instead of keyword**. This is a really peculiar quirk of TextMate conventions, but virtually *all* TextMate grammars use `keyword.other` (colored blue in VSCode Dark+) for regular keywords and `keyword.control` (colored purple in VSCode Dark+) for control keywords. The TextMate scope `keyword` is colored like control keywords, not regular keywords. It may seem strange that the `keyword` scope is not the right fallback for the `keyword` semantic token, but TextMate has a long and weird history. Note how keywords change from purple back to blue (what they were before semantic coloring was added):

**(1) Use punctuation.section.embedded for format specifiers**. This aligns with how Typescript colors formatting directives:

<img width="238" alt="Screen Shot 2020-05-09 at 10 54 01 AM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1369240/81481258-93b5f280-91e3-11ea-99c2-c6d258c5bcad.png">

**(2) Consistently use `entity.name.type.*` scopes for type names**. Avoid using `entity.name.*` which gets colored like a keyword.

**(3) Use Property instead of Member for fields**. Property and Member are very similar, but if you look at the TextMate fallback scopes, it's clear that Member is intended for function-like-things (methods?) and Property is intended for variable-like-things.

**(4) Color `for` as a regular keyword when it's part of `impl Trait for Struct`**. 

**(5) Use `variable.other.constant` for constants instead of `entity.name.constant`**. In the latest VSCode insiders, variable.other.constant has a subtly different color that differentiates constants from ordinary variables. It looks close to the green of types but it's not the same---it's a new color recently added to take advantage of semantic coloring.

I also made some minor changes that make the TextMate scopes better match the semantic scopes. The effect of this for the user is you observe less of a change when semantic coloring "activates". You can see the changes I made relative to the built-in TextMate grammar here:

a91d15c80c..97428b6d52 (diff-6966c729b862f79f79bf7258eb3e0885)


Co-authored-by: George Fraser <george@fivetran.com>
2020-05-11 17:33:38 +00:00
..
src Merge #4397 2020-05-11 17:33:38 +00:00
tests/heavy_tests Check client capabilities before sending progress notifications 2020-05-11 13:16:46 -04:00
build.rs Remove unused placeholder 2020-02-21 18:33:45 +08:00
Cargo.toml Bump deps 2020-05-01 15:29:03 +03:00