feat: Suggest name in completion for let_stmt and fn_param
fix#17780
1. Refactor: move `ide_assist::utils::suggest_name` to `ide-db::syntax_helpers::suggest_name` for reuse.
2. When completing `IdentPat`, detecte if the current node is a `let_stmt` or `fn_param`, and suggesting a new name based on the context.
This commit makes the "Wrap return type in Result" assist prefer type aliases of standard library
type when the are in scope, use at least one generic parameter, and have the name "Result".
The last restriction was made in an attempt to avoid false assumptions about which type the
user is referring to, but that might be overly strict. We could also do something like this, in
order of priority:
* Use the alias named "Result".
* Use any alias if only a single one is in scope, otherwise:
* Use the standard library type.
This is easy to add if others feel differently that is appropriate, just let me know.
Attributes often contain path followed by a token tree (e.g. `align(2)`, and the previous code handled them as two separate items, which led to results such as `#[repr(alignC, (2))]`.
An alternative is to just make the assist unavailable in attributes, like we do in macros. But contrary to macros, attributes often have a fixed form, so this seems useful.
This makes the generated impl's indentation match the ADT it targets, improving formatting when
using nested modules inside of the same file or when defining types inside of a function.
Consider field attributes when converting from tuple to named struct and the opposite
Fixes#17983.
I tried to use the `SourceChangeBuilder::make_mut()` API, but it duplicated the attribute...
fix: Don't add reference when it isn't needed for the "Extract variable" assist
I.e. don't generate `let var_name = &foo()`. Because it always irritates me when I need to fix that.
Anything that creates a new value don't need a reference. That excludes mostly field accesses and indexing.
I had a thought that we can also not generate a reference for fields and indexing as long as the type is `Copy`, but sometimes people impl `Copy` even when they don't want to copy the values (e.g. a large type), so I didn't do that.
feat: Create an assist to convert closure to freestanding fn
The assist converts all captures to parameters.
Closes#17920.
This was more work than I though, since it has to handle a bunch of edge cases...
Based on #17941. Needs to merge it first.
I.e. don't generate `let var_name = &foo()`.
Anything that creates a new value don't need a reference. That excludes mostly field accesses and indexing.
I had a thought that we can also not generate a reference for fields and indexing as long as the type is `Copy`, but sometimes people impl `Copy` even when they don't want to copy the values (e.g. a large type), so I didn't do that.
Always show error lifetime arguments as `'_`
Fixes#17947
Changed error lifetime argument presentation in non-test environment to `'_` and now showing them even if all of args are error lifetimes.
This also influenced some of the other tests like `extract_function.rs`, `predicate.rs` and `type_pos.rs`. Not sure whether I need to refrain from adding lifetimes args there. Happy to fix if needed
This PR touches a lot of parts. But the main changes are changing
`hir_expand::Name` to be raw edition-dependently and only when necessary
(unrelated to how the user originally wrote the identifier),
and changing `is_keyword()` and `is_raw_identifier()` to be edition-aware
(this was done in #17896, but the FIXMEs were fixed here).
It is possible that I missed some cases, but most IDE parts should properly
escape (or not escape) identifiers now.
The rules of thumb are:
- If we show the identifier to the user, its rawness should be determined
by the edition of the edited crate. This is nice for IDE features,
but really important for changes we insert to the source code.
- For tests, I chose `Edition::CURRENT` (so we only have to (maybe) update
tests when an edition becomes stable, to avoid churn).
- For debugging tools (helper methods and logs), I used `Edition::LATEST`.
The commands `editor.action.triggerParameterHints` and
`editor.action.rename` are now renamed to
`rust-analyzer.triggerParameterHints` and `rust-analyzer.rename`
This change helps make it clear that these commands are specific to
rust-analyzer and not part of the default set of commands provided by
VSCode.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/17644
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.