handle {self} when removing unused imports
Fixes#17139
On master
```rs
mod inner {
pub struct X();
pub struct Y();
}
mod z {
use super::inner::{self, X}$0;
fn f() {
let y = inner::Y();
}
}
```
becomes
```rs
mod inner {
pub struct X();
pub struct Y();
}
mod z {
use super::inner:self;
fn f() {
let y = inner::Y();
}
}
```
with this fix it instead becomes
```
```rs
mod inner {
pub struct X();
pub struct Y();
}
mod z {
use super::inner;
fn f() {
let y = inner::Y();
}
}
```
Before this commit `UseTree::remove_unnecessary_braces` removed the braces
around `{self}` in `use x::y::{self};` but `use x::y::self;` is not valid
rust.
Separate into create and apply edit
Rename usages
Hacky name map
Add more tests
Handle non-exhaustive
Add some more TODOs
Private fields
Use todo
Nesting
Improve rest token generation
Cleanup
Doc -> regular comment
Support mut
Implement `literal_from_str` for proc macro server
Closes#16233
Todos and unanswered questions:
- [x] Is this the correct approach? Can both the legacy and `rust_analyzer_span` servers depend on the `syntax` crate?
- [ ] How should we handle suffixes for string literals? It doesn't seem like `rust-analyzer` preservers suffix information after parsing.
- [x] Why are the `expect` tests failing? Specifically `test_fn_like_macro_clone_literals`
This commit also adds `tracing` to NotificationDispatcher/RequestDispatcher,
bumps `rust-analyzer-salsa` to 0.17.0-pre.6, `always-assert` to 0.2, and
removes the homegrown `hprof` implementation in favor of a vendored
tracing-span-tree.
`unescape_literal` becomes `unescape_unicode`, and `unescape_c_string`
becomes `unescape_mixed`. Because rfc3349 will mean that C string
literals will no longer be the only mixed utf8 literals.
- Rename it as `MixedUnit`, because it will soon be used in more than
just C string literals.
- Change the `Byte` variant to `HighByte` and use it only for
`\x80`..`\xff` cases. This fixes the old inexactness where ASCII chars
could be encoded with either `Byte` or `Char`.
- Add useful comments.
- Remove `is_ascii`, in favour of `u8::is_ascii`.
`cargo clippy --fix`
This PR is the result of running `cargo clippy --fix && cargo fmt` in the root of the repository. I did not manually review all the changes, but just skimmed through a few of them. The tests still pass, so it seems fine.
Detect `NulInCStr` error earlier.
By making it an `EscapeError` instead of a `LitError`. This makes it like the other errors produced when checking string literals contents, e.g. for invalid escape sequences or bare CR chars.
NOTE: this means these errors are issued earlier, before expansion, which changes behaviour. It will be possible to move the check back to the later point if desired. If that happens, it's likely that all the string literal contents checks will be delayed together.
One nice thing about this: the old approach had some code in `report_lit_error` to calculate the span of the nul char from a range. This code used a hardwired `+2` to account for the `c"` at the start of a C string literal, but this should have changed to a `+3` for raw C string literals to account for the `cr"`, which meant that the caret in `cr"` nul error messages was one short of where it should have been. The new approach doesn't need any of this and avoids the off-by-one error.
r? ```@fee1-dead```
fix: better handling of SelfParam in assist 'inline_call'
fix#15470.
The current `inline_call` directly translates `&self` into `let ref this = ...;` and `&mut self` into `let ref mut this = ...;`. However, it does not handle some complex scenarios.
This PR addresses the following transformations (assuming the receiving object is `obj`):
- `self`: `let this = obj`
- `mut self`: `let mut this = obj`
- `&self`: `let this = &obj`
- `&mut self`
+ If `obj` is `let mut obj = ...`, use a mutable reference: `let this = &mut obj`
+ If `obj` is `let obj = &mut ...;`, perform a reborrow: `let this = &mut *obj`
By making it an `EscapeError` instead of a `LitError`. This makes it
like the other errors produced when checking string literals contents,
e.g. for invalid escape sequences or bare CR chars.
NOTE: this means these errors are issued earlier, before expansion,
which changes behaviour. It will be possible to move the check back to
the later point if desired. If that happens, it's likely that all the
string literal contents checks will be delayed together.
One nice thing about this: the old approach had some code in
`report_lit_error` to calculate the span of the nul char from a range.
This code used a hardwired `+2` to account for the `c"` at the start of
a C string literal, but this should have changed to a `+3` for raw C
string literals to account for the `cr"`, which meant that the caret in
`cr"` nul error messages was one short of where it should have been. The
new approach doesn't need any of this and avoids the off-by-one error.
fix: Fix `ast::Path::segments` implementation
calling `ast::Path::segments` on a qualifier currently returns all the segments of the top path instead of just the segments of the qualifier.
The issue can be summarized by the simple failing test below:
```rust
#[test]
fn path_segments() {
//use ra_ap_syntax::ast;
let path: ast::Path = ...; // e.g. `ast::Path` for "foo::bar::item".
let path_segments: Vec<_> = path.segments().collect();
let qualifier_segments: Vec<_> = path.qualifier().unwrap().segments().collect();
assert_eq!(path_segments.len(), qualifier_segments.len() + 1); // Fails because `LHS = RHS`.
}
```
This PR:
- Fixes the implementation of `ast::Path::segments`
- Fixes `ast::Path::segments` callers that either implicitly relied on behavior of previous implementation or exhibited other "wrong" behavior directly related to the result of `ast::Path::segments` (all callers have been reviewed, only one required modification)
- Removes unnecessary (and now unused) `ast::Path::segments` alternatives
fix: rewrite code_action `generate_delegate_trait`
I've made substantial enhancements to the "generate delegate trait" code action in rust-analyzer. Here's a summary of the changes:
#### Resolved the "Can’t find CONST_ARG@158..159 in AstIdMap" error
Fix#15804, fix#15968, fix#15108
The issue stemmed from an incorrect application of PathTransform in the original code. Previously, a new 'impl' was generated first and then transformed, causing PathTransform to fail in locating the correct AST node, resulting in an error. I rectified this by performing the transformation before generating the new 'impl' (using make::impl_trait), ensuring a step-by-step transformation of associated items.
#### Rectified generation of `Self` type
`generate_delegate_trait` is unable to properly handle trait with `Self` type.
Let's take the following code as an example:
```rust
trait Trait {
fn f() -> Self;
}
struct B {}
impl Trait for B {
fn f() -> B { B{} }
}
struct S {
b: B,
}
```
Here, if we implement `Trait` for `S`, the type of `f` should be `() -> Self`, i.e. `() -> S`. However we cannot automatically generate a function that constructs `S`.
To ensure that the code action doesn't generate delegate traits for traits with Self types, I add a function named `has_self_type` to handle it.
#### Extended support for generics in structs and fields within this code action
The former version of `generate_delegate_trait` cannot handle structs with generics properly. Here's an example:
```rust
struct B<T> {
a: T
}
trait Trait<T> {
fn f(a: T);
}
impl<T1, T2> Trait<T1> for B<T2> {
fn f(a: T1) -> T2 { self.a }
}
struct A {}
struct S {
b$0 : B<A>,
}
```
The former version will generates improper code:
```rust
impl<T1, T2> Trait<T1, T2> for S {
fn f(&self, a: T1) -> T1 {
<B as Trait<T1, T2>>::f( &self.b , a)
}
}
```
The rewritten version can handle generics properly:
```rust
impl<T1> Trait<T1> for S {
fn f(&self, a: T1) -> T1 {
<B<A> as Trait<T1>>::f(&self.b, a)
}
}
```
See more examples in added unit tests.
I enabled support for generic structs in `generate_delegate_trait` through the following steps (using the code example provided):
1. Initially, to prevent conflicts between the generic parameters in struct `S` and the ones in the impl of `B`, I renamed the generic parameters of `S`.
2. Then, since `B`'s parameters are instantiated within `S`, the original generic parameters of `B` needed removal within `S` (to avoid errors from redundant parameters). An important consideration here arises when Trait and B share parameters in `B`'s impl. In such cases, these shared generic parameters cannot be removed.
3. Next, I addressed the matching of types between `B`'s type in `S` and its type in the impl. Given that some generic parameters in the impl are instantiated in `B`, I replaced these parameters with their instantiated results using PathTransform. For instance, in the example provided, matching `B<A>` and `B<T2>`, where `T2` is instantiated as `A`, I replaced all occurrences of `T2` in the impl with `A` (i.e. apply the instantiated generic arguments to the params).
4. Finally, I performed transformations on each assoc item (also to prevent the initial issue) and handled redundant where clauses.
For a more detailed explanation, please refer to the code and comments. I welcome suggestions and any further questions!
internal: Migrate assists to the structured snippet API, part 4
Continuing from #15260
Migrates the following assists:
- `add_turbo_fish`
- `add_type_ascription`
- `destructure_tuple_binding`
- `destructure_tuple_binding_in_subpattern`
I did this a while ago, but forgot to make a PR for the changes until now. 😅
Due to the way the current tree mutation api works, we need to collect
changes before we can apply them to the real syntax tree, and also can only
switch to a file once.
`destructure_tuple_binding_in_sub_pattern` also gets migrated even
though can't be used.
feat: Bool to enum assist
This adds the `bool_to_enum` assist, which converts the type of boolean local variables, fields, constants and statics to a new `enum` type, making it easier to distinguish the meaning of `true` and `false` by renaming the variants.
Closes#14779
the "add missing members" assists: implemented substitution of default values of const params
To achieve this, I've made `hir::ConstParamData` store the default values
internal : rewrite DeMorgan assist
fixes#15239 , #15240 . This PR is a rewrite of the DeMorgan assist that essentially rids of all the string manipulation and modifies syntax trees to apply demorgan on a binary expr. The main reason for the rewrite is that I wanted to use `Expr::needs_parens_in` method to see if the expr on which the assist is applied would still need the parens it had once the parent expression's operator had equal precedence with that of the expression. I used `.clone_(subtree|for_update)` left and right and probably more than I should have, so I would also be happy to hear how I could have prevented redundant cloning.