When viewing traces, it's slightly confusing when the span name doesn't
match the function name. Ensure the names are consistent.
(It might be worth moving most of these to use #[tracing::instrument]
so the name can never go stale. @davidbarsky suggested that is marginally
slower, so I've just done the simple change here.)
Better inline preview for postfix completion
Better inline preview for postfix completion, a proper implementation of c5686c8941.
Here editors may filter completion item with the text within `delete_range`, so we need to include the `receiver text` in the `lookup` (aka `FilterText` in LSP spec) for editors to find the completion item. (See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/17036#issuecomment-2056614180, Thanks to [pascalkuthe](https://github.com/pascalkuthe))
Changed the completion item source_range to match
the replaced text. Though in VS Code it may not be
disturbing because the snippet is previewed in a
box, but in Helix editor, it's previewed by applying
the main text edit.
feat: Syntax highlighting improvements
Specifically
- Adds a new `constant` modifier, attached to keyword `const` (except for `*const ()` and `&raw const ()`), `const` items and `const` functions
- Adds (or rather reveals) `associated` modifier for associated items
- Fixes usage of the standard `static` modifier, now it acts like `associated` except being omitted for methods.
- Splits `SymbolKind::Function` into `Function` and `Method`. We already split other things like that (notable self param from params), so the split makes sense in general as a lot special cases around it anyways.
feat: Add "make tuple" tactic to term search
Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16092
Now term search also supports tuples.
```rust
let a: i32 = 1;
let b: f64 = 0.0;
let c: (i32, (f64, i32)) = todo!(); // Finds (a, (b, a))
```
In addition to new tactic that handles tuples I changed how the generics are handled.
Previously it tried all possible options from types we had in scope but now it only tries useful ones that help us directly towards the goal or at least towards calling some other function.
This changes O(2^n) to O(n^2) where n is amount of rounds which in practice allows using types that take generics for multiple rounds (previously limited to 1). Average case that also used to be exponential is now roughly linear.
This means that deeply nested generics also work.
````rust
// Finds all valid combos, including `Some(Some(Some(...)))`
let a: Option<Option<Option<bool>>> = todo!();
````
_Note that although the complexity is smaller allowing more types with generics the search overall slows down considerably. I hope it's fine tho as the autocomplete is disabled by default and for code actions it's not super slow. Might have to tweak the depth hyper parameter tho_
This resulted in a huge increase of results found (benchmarks on `ripgrep` crate):
Before
````
Tail Expr syntactic hits: 149/1692 (8%)
Tail Exprs found: 749/1692 (44%)
Term search avg time: 18ms
```
After
```
Tail Expr syntactic hits: 291/1692 (17%)
Tail Exprs found: 1253/1692 (74%)
Term search avg time: 139ms
````
Most changes are local to term search except some tuple related stuff on `hir::Type`.
Add completions to show only traits in trait `impl` statement
This is prerequisite PR for adding the assist mentioned in #12500
P.S: If wanted, I will add the implementation of the assist in this PR as well.
Abstract more over ItemTreeLoc-like structs
Allows reducing some code duplication by using functions generic over said structs. The diff isn't negative due to me adding some additional impls for completeness.
internal: even more `tracing`
As part of profiling completions, I added some additional spans and moved `TyBuilder::subst_for_def` closer to its usage site (the latter had a small impact on completion performance. Thanks for the tip, Lukas!)
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.
feat: "Normalize import" assist and utilities for normalizing use trees
- Add import/use tree normalization utilities
- Add "normalize import" assist
- Update "merge imports" assist to always apply to the covering use item except for nested use tree selections
- Update "merge imports" assist to avoid adding unnecessary braces when merging nested use tree selections
See [this discussion](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16372#discussion_r1457244321) for the motivation for the new "normalize import" assist and changes to the "merge imports" assist.
This commit changes how the expected type is calculated when working
with Fn pointers, making the parenthesis stop vanishing when completing
the function name.
I've been bugged by the behaviour on parenthesis completion for a long
while now. R-a assumes that the `LetStmt` type is the same as the
function type I've just written. Worse is that all parenthesis vanish,
even from functions that have completely different signatures. It will
now verify if the signature is the same.
While working on this, I noticed that record fields behave the same, so
I also made it prioritize the field type instead of the current
expression when possible, but I'm unsure if this is OK, so input is
appreciated.
ImplTraits as return types will still behave weirdly because lowering is
disallowed at the time it resolves the function types.
fix: make callable fields not complete in method access no parens case
Follow up PR for #15879
Fixes the callable field completion appearing in the method access with no parens case.
Complete exported macros in `#[macro_use($0)]`
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15657.
Originally added a test case for incomplete input:
```rust
#[test]
fn completes_incomplete_syntax() {
check(
r#"
//- /dep.rs crate:dep
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! foo {
() => {};
}
//- /main.rs crate:main deps:dep
#[macro_use($0
extern crate dep;
"#,
expect![[r#"
ma foo
"#]],
)
}
```
but couldn't make it pass and removed it 😅 Our current recovering logic doesn't work for token trees and for this code:
```rust
#[macro_use(
extern crate lazy_static;
fn main() {}
```
we ended up with this syntax tree:
```
SOURCE_FILE@0..53
ATTR@0..52
POUND@0..1 "#"
L_BRACK@1..2 "["
META@2..52
PATH@2..11
PATH_SEGMENT@2..11
NAME_REF@2..11
IDENT@2..11 "macro_use"
TOKEN_TREE@11..52
L_PAREN@11..12 "("
WHITESPACE@12..13 "\n"
EXTERN_KW@13..19 "extern"
WHITESPACE@19..20 " "
CRATE_KW@20..25 "crate"
WHITESPACE@25..26 " "
IDENT@26..37 "lazy_static"
SEMICOLON@37..38 ";"
WHITESPACE@38..40 "\n\n"
FN_KW@40..42 "fn"
WHITESPACE@42..43 " "
IDENT@43..47 "main"
TOKEN_TREE@47..49
L_PAREN@47..48 "("
R_PAREN@48..49 ")"
WHITESPACE@49..50 " "
TOKEN_TREE@50..52
L_CURLY@50..51 "{"
R_CURLY@51..52 "}"
WHITESPACE@52..53 "\n"
```
Maybe we can try to parse the token tree in `crates/ide-completion/src/context/analysis.rs` but I'm not sure what's the best way forward.