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.
Implement symbol interning infra
Will fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15590
My unsafe-fu is not the best but it does satisfy miri.
There is still some follow up work to do, notably a lot of places using strings instead of symbols/names, most notably the token tree.
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 `f16` and `f128` as simd types in LLVM
`@sayantn` is working on adding SIMD for `f16` and hitting the `FloatingPointVector` error. This should fix it and unblock adding support for `simd_fma` and `simd_fabs` in stdarch.
feat: do not add new enum if it already exists
## Summary
This PR introduces a check for the existence of another enum within the current scope, and if it exist, we skip `add_enum_def`.
## Why?
Currently, when using the `bool_to_enum` assist more than once, it is possible to add multiple enum definitions. For example, the following snippet,
```rs
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
enum Bool {
True,
False,
}
fn main() {
let a = Bool::True;
let b = true;
println!("Hello, world!");
}
```
will be transformed into,
```rs
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
enum Bool {
True,
False,
}
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
enum Bool {
True,
False,
}
fn main() {
let a = Bool::True;
let b = Bool::True;
println!("Hello, world!");
}
```
This can be annoying for users to clean up.
Implement simple, unstable lint to suggest turning closure-of-async-block into async-closure
We want to eventually suggest people to turn `|| async {}` to `async || {}`. This begins doing that. It's a pretty rudimentary lint, but I wanted to get something down so I wouldn't lose the code.
Tracking:
* #62290
internal: Remove faq landing page, improve main one
Having more than one is potentialyl annoying as both will get opened upon install, using walkthroughs for this is not ideal. So this merges the two and also adds a couple tips, fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/17569
Add `f16` and `f128` support
Adds `f16` and `f128` support, using the `rustc_apfloat` library (also used by `rustc`) for parsing/arithmetic/displaying since the types aren't stable yet so can't be used by rust-analyzer itself.
Issue: #17451
feat: add inlay hints for generic parameters
fixes#11091
By default, only hints for const generic parameters are shown, and this can be configured through `rust-analyzer.inlayHints.genericParameterHints.enable`.
Probably needs more testing.
Migrate `extern-flag-pathless`, `silly-file-names`, `metadata-dep-info`, `cdylib-fewer-symbols` and `symbols-include-type-name` `run-make` tests to rmake
Part of #121876 and the associated [Google Summer of Code project](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/05/01/gsoc-2024-selected-projects.html).
`cdylib-fewer-symbols` demands a Windows try-job. (Almost guaranteed to fail, but 7 years is a long time)
try-job: x86_64-gnu-distcheck
try-job: x86_64-msvc
try-job: aarch64-apple
Fix regression in the MIR lowering of or-patterns
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126553 I made a silly indexing mistake and regressed the MIR lowering of or-patterns. This fixes it.
r? `@compiler-errors` because I'd like this to be merged quickly 🙏