Being new to Rust I wasn't familiar with this acronym and found it hard to guess (the context of syntax trees biased me to reading it as a D-something Syntax Tree and trying to guess what the D was), hard to google (in retrospect googling "rust dst" does the job, but I thought it was an abstract structure thing, not Rust-specific), and hard to Github-search, because `dst` is commonly short for “destination” in code.
Alternatively `<abbr title="dynamically sized type">DST</abbr>` would be about as helpful.
Some features of rust-analyzer requires support for custom commands on
the client side. Specifically, hover & code lens need this.
Stock LSP doesn't have a way for the server to know which client-side
commands are available. For that reason, we historically were just
sending the commands, not worrying whether the client supports then or
not.
That's not really great though, so in this PR we add infrastructure for
the client to explicitly opt-into custom commands, via `extensions`
field of the ClientCapabilities.
To preserve backwards compatability, if the client doesn't set the
field, we assume that it does support all custom commands. In the
future, we'll start treating that case as if the client doesn't support
commands.
So, if you maintain a rust-analyzer client and implement
`rust-analyzer/runSingle` and such, please also advertise this via a
capability.
9692: Use same cancelled spelling in doc and code. r=matklad a=mattiasgronlund
Right thing might be to update the spelling in the code to
follow American instead of English spelling, that is
using only canceled. But they should at least be aligned.
Co-authored-by: Mattias Grönlund <mattias@gronlund.se>
Right thing might be to update the spelling in the code to
follow American instead of English spelling, that is
using only canceled. But they should at least be aligned.
One source completion can produce up to two lsp completions.
Additionally, `preselct` and `sort_text` are global properties of the
whole set of completions, so the right granularity here is to convert
many completions.
As a side-benefit, we no loger allocate intermediate vec.