9835: feat: Generate default trait fn impl when generating `Hash`. r=Veykril a=yoshuawuyts
Implements a default trait function body when generating the `Hash` trait for a type. Thanks!
r? `@Veykril`
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
9830: Enable more assists to generate default trait body impls r=Veykril a=yoshuawuyts
Enable more assists to benefit from trait body generation. Follow-up to #9825 and #9814.
__edit:__ I'd like to move the existing tests to this new file too, but I'll do that in a follow-up PR.
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
9832: vscode extension: use esbuild instead of rollup. r=matklad a=yaymukund
This shaves a couple seconds off our build & trims npm dependencies. I tested it using VSCode's "Install [Extension] from VSIX" option and it seems to work. Note that it changes the root of the package from `out/src/main → out/main`.
Fell out of the discussion in #9179
Co-authored-by: Mukund Lakshman <yaymukund@gmail.com>
9833: [semantic-highlighting] functions that consume are marked as HlMod::Consuming r=matklad a=jhgg
Does as the PR title says, functions that *consume* self, are marked as *consuming*.
Co-authored-by: Jake Heinz <jh@discordapp.com>
9804: Generate method from call r=matklad a=mahdi-frms
Needs a bit of refactoring. Tests also should be added.
Co-authored-by: mahdi-frms <mahdif1380@outlook.com>
9825: Generate default impl when converting #[derive(Default)] to manual impl r=Veykril a=yoshuawuyts
Similar to https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9814, but for `#[derive(Default)]`. Thanks!
## Follow-up steps
I've added the tests inside `handlers/replace_derive_with_manual_impl.rs` again, but I'm planning a follow-up PR to extract these to `utils/` so we can share them between assists - and maybe even add another assist just for the purpose of testing these impls (e.g. `generate_default_trait_body`).
The step after _that_ is likely to fill out the remaining traits, so we can make it so whenever RA auto-completes a trait which also can be derived, we provide a default function body.
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
From the dawn of time, when dinosaurs roamed the and we didn't have
hierarchical profiling, there was the `latest_requests` infra we used to
track the time of ten last requests.
Today, no one is actually using it and, what's more, it itself became
pretty useless -- LSP grew way more chatty, and 10 requests don't really
paint any kind of picture.
Personally, it's been years since I last looked at latest requests in
the status output.
So, let's remove a tiny bit of state from the big ball of complexity
that is `GlobalState` and `main_loop`!
Today, rust-analyzer (and rustc, and bat, and IntelliJ) fail badly on
some kinds of maliciously constructed code, like a deep sequence of
nested parenthesis.
"Who writes 100k nested parenthesis" you'd ask?
Well, in a language with macros, a run-away macro expansion might do
that (see the added tests)! Such expansion can be broad, rather than
deep, so it bypasses recursion check at the macro-expansion layer, but
triggers deep recursion in parser.
In the ideal world, the parser would just handle deeply nested structs
gracefully. We'll get there some day, but at the moment, let's try to be
simple, and just avoid expanding macros with unbalanced parenthesis in
the first place.
closes#9358
We generally avoid "syntax only" helper wrappers, which don't do much:
they make code easier to write, but harder to read. They also make
investigations harder, as "find_usages" needs to be invoked both for the
wrapped and unwrapped APIs