With the lack of a README on the individually published library crates and the somewhat cryptic `ra_ap_` prefix it is hard to figure out where those crates belong to, so mentioning "rust-analyzer" feels like auseful hint there.
feat: Use spans for builtin and declarative macro expansion errors
This should generally improve some error reporting for macro expansion errors. Especially for `compile_error!` within proc-macros
Clean up a few minor refs in `format!` macro, as it has a performance cost. Apparently the compiler is unable to inline `format!("{}", &variable)`, and does a run-time double-reference instead (format macro already does one level referencing). Inlining format args prevents accidental `&` misuse.
feat: Add incorrect case diagnostics for enum variant fields and all variables/params
Updates the incorrect case diagnostic to check:
1. Fields of enum variants. Example:
```rust
enum Foo {
Variant { nonSnake: u8 }
}
```
2. All variable bindings, instead of just let bindings and certain match arm patters. Examples:
```rust
match 1 { nonSnake => () }
match 1 { nonSnake @ 1 => () }
match 1 { nonSnake1 @ nonSnake2 => () } // slightly cursed, but these both introduce new
// bindings that are bound to the same value.
const ONE: i32 = 1;
match 1 { nonSnake @ ONE } // ONE is ignored since it is not a binding
match Some(1) { Some(nonSnake) => () }
struct Foo { field: u8 }
match (Foo { field: 1 } ) {
Foo { field: nonSnake } => ();
}
struct Foo { nonSnake: u8 } // diagnostic here, at definition
match (Foo { nonSnake: 1 } ) { // no diagnostic here...
Foo { nonSnake } => (); // ...or here, since these are not where the name is introduced
}
for nonSnake in [] {}
struct Foo(u8);
for Foo(nonSnake) in [] {}
```
3. All parameter bindings, instead of just top-level binding identifiers. Examples:
```rust
fn func(nonSnake: u8) {} // worked before
struct Foo { field: u8 }
fn func(Foo { field: nonSnake }: Foo) {} // now get diagnostic for nonSnake
```
This is accomplished by changing the way binding identifier patterns are filtered:
- Previously, all binding idents were skipped, except a few classes of "good" binding locations that were checked.
- Now, all binding idents are checked, except field shorthands which are skipped.
Moving from a whitelist to a blacklist potentially makes the analysis more brittle:
If new pattern types are added in the future where ident pats don't introduce new names, then they may incorrectly create diagnostics.
But the benefit of the blacklist approach is simplicity: I think a whitelist approach would need to recursively visit patterns to collect renaming candidates?
Trigger VSCode to rename after extract variable assist is applied
When the user applies the "Extract Variable" assist, the cursor is
positioned at the newly inserted variable. This commit adds a command
to the assist that triggers the rename action in VSCode. This way, the
user can quickly rename the variable after applying the assist.
Fixes part of: #17579https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4cf38740-ab22-4b94-b0f1-eddd51c26c29
I haven't yet looked at the module or function extraction assists yet.
When the user applies the "Extract Variable" assist, the cursor is
positioned at the newly inserted variable. This commit adds a command
to the assist that triggers the rename action in VSCode. This way, the
user can quickly rename the variable after applying the assist.
Fixes part of: #17579
Add an option to use "::" for the external crate prefix.
Fixes#11823 .
Hi I'm very new to rust-analyzer and not sure how the review process are. Can somebody take a look at this PR? thanks!
Quality of life improvements to term search
Basically two things:
- Allow optionally disabling "borrow checking" restrictions on term search code assists. Sometimes it is better to get invalid suggestions and fix borrow checking issues later...
- Remove explicit generics in generated expressions. I find it quite rare that one writes `None::<T>` instead of `None`.
fix: Improve hover text in unlinked file diagnostics
Use full sentences, and mention how to disable the diagnostic if users are intentionally working on unowned files.
![Screenshot 2024-06-12 at 5 55 48 PM](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/70800/c91ee1ed-1c72-495a-9ee3-9e360a5c6977)
(Full disclosure: I've tested a rust-analyzer build in VS Code, but the pop-up logic is currently disabled due to #17062, so I haven't tested that.)
This partially reverts #17350, based on the feedback in #17397.
If we don't have an autofix, it's more annoying to highlight the whole line.
This heuristic fixes the diagnostic overwhelming the user during startup.