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internal: explain "extract if condition" refactoring
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2 changed files with 29 additions and 10 deletions
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@ -927,22 +927,22 @@ pub(crate) fn handle_formatting(
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let captured_stderr = String::from_utf8(output.stderr).unwrap_or_default();
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if !output.status.success() {
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match output.status.code() {
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Some(1)
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if !captured_stderr.contains("not installed")
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&& !captured_stderr.contains("not available") =>
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{
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let rustfmt_not_installed =
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captured_stderr.contains("not installed") || captured_stderr.contains("not available");
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return match output.status.code() {
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Some(1) if !rustfmt_not_installed => {
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// While `rustfmt` doesn't have a specific exit code for parse errors this is the
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// likely cause exiting with 1. Most Language Servers swallow parse errors on
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// formatting because otherwise an error is surfaced to the user on top of the
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// syntax error diagnostics they're already receiving. This is especially jarring
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// if they have format on save enabled.
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log::info!("rustfmt exited with status 1, assuming parse error and ignoring");
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return Ok(None);
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Ok(None)
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}
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_ => {
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// Something else happened - e.g. `rustfmt` is missing or caught a signal
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return Err(LspError::new(
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Err(LspError::new(
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-32900,
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format!(
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r#"rustfmt exited with:
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@ -952,9 +952,9 @@ pub(crate) fn handle_formatting(
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output.status, captured_stdout, captured_stderr,
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),
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)
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.into());
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.into())
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}
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}
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};
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}
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let (new_text, new_line_endings) = LineEndings::normalize(captured_stdout);
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@ -842,7 +842,26 @@ Re-using originally single-purpose function often leads to bad coupling.
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## Helper Variables
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Introduce helper variables freely, especially for multiline conditions.
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Introduce helper variables freely, especially for multiline conditions:
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```rust
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// GOOD
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let rustfmt_not_installed =
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captured_stderr.contains("not installed") || captured_stderr.contains("not available");
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match output.status.code() {
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Some(1) if !rustfmt_not_installed => Ok(None),
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_ => Err(format_err!("rustfmt failed:\n{}", captured_stderr)),
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};
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// BAD
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match output.status.code() {
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Some(1)
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if !captured_stderr.contains("not installed")
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&& !captured_stderr.contains("not available") => Ok(None),
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_ => Err(format_err!("rustfmt failed:\n{}", captured_stderr)),
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};
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```
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**Rationale:** like blocks, single-use variables are a cognitively cheap abstraction, as they have access to all the context.
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Extra variables help during debugging, they make it easy to print/view important intermediate results.
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