2348: Add support for stringify! builtin macro r=matklad a=piotr-szpetkowski
Refs #2212
First time ever contributing here, hopefully it's ok.
2352: Move TypeAlias to hir_def r=matklad a=matklad
Co-authored-by: Piotr Szpetkowski <piotr.szpetkowski@pyquest.space>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
2179: Use HirDatabase to compute `is_deprecated` r=matklad a=martskins
This PR fixes#2167 by introducing `attributes_query` and adding `fn attrs(&self, def: crate::AttrDef) -> Option<Arc<[Attr]>>;` to the `DefDatabase` trait.
I'm a little concerned about the two spots in `attributes_query` where code is repeated, but I couldn't figure out a way to avoid that, so.. I welcome suggestions 😄
Co-authored-by: Martin Asquino <martin.asquino@gmail.com>
This is only allowed for generic parameters (including `Self` in traits), and
special care needs to be taken to not run into cycles while resolving it,
because we use the where clauses of the generic parameter to find candidates for
the trait containing the associated type, but the where clauses may themselves
contain instances of short-hand associated types.
In some cases this is even fine, e.g. we might have `T: Trait<U::Item>, U:
Iterator`. If there is a cycle, we'll currently panic, which isn't great, but
better than overflowing the stack...
This is to make debugging rust-analyzer easier.
The idea is that `dbg!(krate.debug(db))` will print the actual, fuzzy
crate name, instead of precise ID. Debug printing infra is a separate
thing, to make sure that the actual hir doesn't have access to global
information.
Do not use `.debug` for `log::` logging: debugging executes queries,
and might introduce unneded dependencies to the crate graph
This wasn't a right decision in the first place, the feature flag was
broken in the last rustfmt release, and syntax highlighting of imports
is more important anyway
This gives a significant speedup, because chalk will call these
functions several times even withing a single revision. The only
significant one here is `impl_data`, but I figured it might be good to
cache others just for consistency.
The results I get are:
Before:
from scratch: 16.081457952s
no change: 15.846493ms
trivial change: 352.95592ms
comment change: 361.998408ms
const change: 457.629212ms
After:
from scratch: 14.910610278s
no change: 14.934647ms
trivial change: 85.633023ms
comment change: 96.433023ms
const change: 171.543296ms
Seems like a nice win!