9637: Overhaul doc_links testing infra r=Veykril a=Veykril
and fix several issues with current implementation.
Fixes#9617
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Definition::visibility was implemented in a rather roundabout way -- by
asking the parent module about the effective visibility.
This is problematic for a couple of reasons:
* first, it doesn't work for local items
* second, asking module about visibility of a child is a linear
operation (that's a problem in itself, tracked in #9378)
Instead, lets ask the declared visibility directly, we have all the code
for it, and need only to actually us it.
The completion of cfg will look at the enabled cfg keys when
performing completion.
It will also look crate features when completing a feature cfg
option. A fixed list of known values for some cfg options are
provided.
For unknown keys it will look at the enabled values for that cfg key,
which means that completion will only show enabled options for those.
9260: tree-wide: make rustdoc links spiky so they are clickable r=matklad a=lf-
Rustdoc was complaining about these while I was running with --document-private-items and I figure they should be fixed.
Co-authored-by: Jade <software@lfcode.ca>
At the moment, this moves only a single diagnostic, but the idea is
reafactor the rest to use the same pattern. We are going to have a
single file per diagnostic. This file will define diagnostics code,
rendering range and fixes, if any. It'll also have all of the tests.
This is similar to how we deal with assists.
After we refactor all diagnostics to follow this pattern, we'll probably
move them to a new `ide_diagnostics` crate.
Not that we intentionally want to test all diagnostics on this layer,
despite the fact that they are generally emitted in the guts on the
compiler. Diagnostics care to much about the end presentation
details/fixes to be worth-while "unit" testing. So, we'll unit-test only
the primary output of compilation process (types and name res tables),
and will use integrated UI tests for diagnostics.
9181: Don't complete values in type position r=jonas-schievink a=Veykril
Will add some proper tests in a bit
9182: fix: don't complete derive macros as fn-like macros r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Part of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8518
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
9169: internal: steps towards attribute macro token mapping r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This doesn't work yet, but we seem to be getting a bit further along (for example, we now stop highlighting `use` items inside item with attribute macros as if they were written verbatim).
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
e.g. if you have a trait T and `impl T for S` for some struct, if you
goto definition on some function name inside the impl, it will go to the
definition of that function inside the `trait T` block, rather than the
current behaviour of not going anywhere at all.
8866: Update salsa r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
This updates salsa to include https://github.com/salsa-rs/salsa/pull/265, and removes all cancellation-related code from rust-analyzer
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8997: internal: stop expanding UseTrees during ItemTree lowering r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8908
Messy diff, but `ItemTree` lowering got simpler, since we now have a strict 1-to-1 mapping between `ast::Item` and `ModItem`.
The most messy part is mapping a single `UseTree` back to its `ast::UseTree` counterpart for diagnostics, but I think the ad-hoc source map built during lowering does the job.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
The idea here is to eventually get rid of `dyn Diagnostic` and
`DiagnosticSink` infrastructure altogether, and just have a `enum
hir::Diagnostic` instead.
The problem with `dyn Diagnostic` is that it is defined in the lowest
level of the stack (hir_expand), but is used by the highest level (ide).
As a first step, we free hir_expand and hir_def from `dyn Diagnostic`
and kick the can up to `hir_ty`, as an intermediate state. The plan is
then to move DiagnosticSink similarly to the hir crate, and, as final
third step, remove its usage from the ide.
One currently unsolved problem is testing. You can notice that the test
which checks precise diagnostic ranges, unresolved_import_in_use_tree,
was moved to the ide layer. Logically, only IDE should have the infra to
render a specific range.
At the same time, the range is determined with the data produced in
hir_def and hir crates, so this layering is rather unfortunate. Working
on hir_def shouldn't require compiling `ide` for testing.
8942: Add `library` semantic token modifier to items from other crates r=arzg a=arzg
Closes#5772.
A lot of code here is pretty repetitive; please let me know if you have any ideas how to improve it, or whether it’s fine as-is.
Side-note: How can I add tests for this? I don’t see a way for the test Rust code in `test_highlighting` to reference other crates to observe the new behaviour.
Co-authored-by: Aramis Razzaghipour <aramisnoah@gmail.com>
The problem was the skipping of binders in
`resolve_method_call_as_callable`; this still doesn't use the _correct_
substitution, but at least it doesn't return a type with free variables
in it.
Fixes#8931.
We can't do the easy hack that we did before anymore, where we kept
track of whether any inference variables changed since the last time we
rechecked obligations. Instead, we store the obligations in
canonicalized form; that way we can easily check the inference variables
to see whether they have changed since the goal was canonicalized.
8813: Get some more array lengths! r=lf- a=lf-
This is built on #8799 and thus contains its changes. I'll rebase it onto master when that one gets merged. It adds support for r-a understanding the length of:
* `let a: [u8; 2] = ...`
* `let a = b"aaa"`
* `let a = [0u8; 4]`
I have added support for getting the values of byte strings, which was not previously there. I am least confident in the correctness of this part and it probably needs some more tests, as we currently have only one test that exercised that part (!).
Fixes#2922.
Co-authored-by: Jade <software@lfcode.ca>
Fix#2922: add unknown length as a condition for a type having unknown.
Incorporate reviews:
* Extract some of the const evaluation workings into functions
* Add fixmes on the hacks
* Add tests for impls on specific array lengths (these work!!! 😁)
* Add tests for const generics (indeed we don't support it yet)
8745: Support goto_type_definition for types r=matklad a=Veykril
I'm unsure if the approach of lowering an `ast::Type` to a `hir::Type` is a good idea, it seems fine to me at least.
Fixes#2882
Co-authored-by: Lukas Tobias Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Store impls for e.g. &Foo with the ones for Foo instead of the big
"other" bucket. This can improve performance and simplifies the HIR impl
search a bit.
Almost all uses actually only care about ADT substs, so it's better to
be explicit. The methods were a bad abstraction anyway since they
already didn't include the inner types of e.g. `TyKind::Ref` anymore.
8284: Reduce memory usage by using global `Arc`-based interning r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This saves around 50 mb when running `analysis-stats` on r-a itself. Not a lot, but this infra can be easily reused to intern more stuff.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7907: Autoderef with visibility r=cynecx a=cynecx
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7841.
I am not sure about the general approach here. Right now this simply tries to check whether the autoderef candidate is reachable from the current module. ~~However this doesn't exactly work with traits (see the `tests::macros::infer_derive_clone_in_core` test, which fails right now).~~ see comment below
Refs:
- `rustc_typeck` checking fields: 66ec64ccf3/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/expr.rs (L1610)
r? @flodiebold
Co-authored-by: cynecx <me@cynecx.net>
By including the crate itself, we make the resulting set closed with
respect to `transitve_reveres_dependencies` operation, as it becomes a
proper transitive closure. This just feels more proper and mathy.
And, indeed, this actually allows us to simplify call sites somewhat.
This in particular means storing a chalk_ir::Environment, not our
TraitEnvironment. This makes InEnvironment not usable for Type, where we
need to keep the full TraitEnvironment.
8133: Ignore type bindings in generic_predicates_for_param (fix panic on ena and crates depending on it) r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
This allows us to handle more cases without a query cycle, which includes certain cases that rustc accepted. That in turn means we avoid triggering salsa-rs/salsa#257 on valid code (it will still happen if the user writes an actual cycle).
We actually accept more definitions than rustc now; that's because rustc only ignores bindings when looking up super traits, whereas we now also ignore them when looking for predicates to disambiguate associated type shorthand. We could introduce a separate query for super traits if necessary, but for now I think this should be fine.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
This allows us to handle more cases without a query cycle, which
includes certain cases that rustc accepted. That in turn means we avoid
triggering salsa-rs/salsa#257 on valid code (it will still happen if the
user writes an actual cycle).
We actually accept more definitions than rustc now; that's because rustc
only ignores bindings when looking up super traits, whereas we now also
ignore them when looking for predicates to disambiguate associated type
shorthand. We could introduce a separate query for super traits if
necessary, but for now I think this should be fine.
7900: show function params in completion detail r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
This resolves#7842 by updating the detail for function completions from `-> T` to `fn(T, U) -> V`. I added an expicit unit test for this, `ide_completion::render::fn_detail_includes_args_and_return_type`, which passes.
Lots of other unit tests fail (~60 of them) due to this change, although I believe the failures are purely cosmetic (they were testing the exact format of this output). I'm happy to go update those tests, but before I do that I'd like to make sure this is in fact the format we want for the detail?
edit - I realized `UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo test` automatically updates `expect!` tests. Big 👍 to whoever worked on that! So I'll go ahead and update all these tests soon. But I still would like to confirm `fn(T, U) -> V` is the desired content in the `detail` field.
8000: Use hir formatter for hover text r=matklad a=oxalica
Fix#2765 , (should) fix#4665
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: oxalica <oxalicc@pm.me>
8020: Power up goto_implementation r=matklad a=Veykril
by allowing it to be invoked on references of names, now showing all (trait)
implementations of the given type in all crates instead of just the defining
crate as well as including support for builtin types
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/111144403-52bb0700-8587-11eb-9205-7a2a5b8b75a3.png)
Example screenshot of `impl`s of Box in `log`, `alloc`, `std` and the current crate. Before you had to invoke it on the definition where it would only show the `impls` in `alloc`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8018: Make Ty wrap TyKind in an Arc r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
... to further move towards Chalk.
This is a bit of a slowdown (218ginstr vs 213ginstr for inference on RA), even though it allows us to unwrap the Substs in `TyKind::Ref` etc..
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
What happens here is that we lower `: ` to a missing expression, and
then correctly record that the corresponding field expression resolves
to a specific field. Where we fail is in the mapping of syntax to this
missing expression. Doing it via `ast_field.expr()` fails, as that
expression is `None`. Instead, we go in the opposite direcition and ask
each lowered field about its source.
This works, but has wrong complexity `O(N)` and, really, the
implementation is just too complex. We need some better management of
data here.
use vec![] instead of Vec::new() + push()
avoid redundant clones
use chars instead of &str for single char patterns in ends_with() and starts_with()
allocate some Vecs with capacity to avoid unneccessary resizing
7873: Consider unresolved qualifiers during flyimport r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7679
Takes unresolved qualifiers into account, providing better completions (or none, if the path is resolved or do not match).
Does not handle cases when both path qualifier and some trait has to be imported: there are many extra issues with those (such as overlapping imports, for instance) that will require large diffs to address.
Also does not do a fuzzy search on qualifier, that requires some adjustments in `import_map` for better queries and changes to the default replace range which also seems relatively big to include here.
![qualifier_completion](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2690773/110040808-0af8dc00-7d4c-11eb-83db-65af94e843bb.gif)
7933: Improve compilation speed r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
7813: Inline TypeCtor into Ty r=flodiebold a=Veykril
This removes the `ApplicationTy` variant from `Ty` bringing the representation a lot closer to chalk's `TyKind`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7804: Introduce TypeCtor::Scalar r=lnicola a=Veykril
`TypeCtor::Int(..) | TypeCtor::Float(..) | TypeCtor::Char | TypeCtor::Bool` => `TypeCtor::Scalar(..)`, in this case we can actually just straight up use `chalk_ir::Scalar` already since its just a POD without any IDs or anything.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7218: Fix typos r=Veykril a=regexident
Apart from the very last commit on this PR (which fixes a public type's name) all changes are non-breaking.
Co-authored-by: Vincent Esche <regexident@gmail.com>
7145: Proper handling $crate Take 2 [DO NOT MERGE] r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
Similar to previous PR (#7133) , but improved the following things :
1. Instead of storing the whole `ExpansionInfo`, we store a similar but stripped version `HygieneInfo`.
2. Instread of storing the `SyntaxNode` (because every token we are interested are IDENT), we store the `TextRange` only.
3. Because of 2, we now can put it in Salsa.
4. And most important improvement: Instead of computing the whole frames every single time, we compute it recursively through salsa: (Such that in the best scenario, we only need to compute the first layer of frame)
```rust
let def_site = db.hygiene_frame(info.def.file_id);
let call_site = db.hygiene_frame(info.arg.file_id);
HygieneFrame { expansion: Some(info), local_inner, krate, call_site, def_site }
```
The overall speed compared to previous PR is much faster (65s vs 45s) :
```
[WITH old PR]
Database loaded 644.86ms, 284mi
Crates in this dir: 36
Total modules found: 576
Total declarations: 11153
Total functions: 8715
Item Collection: 15.78s, 91562mi
Total expressions: 240721
Expressions of unknown type: 2635 (1%)
Expressions of partially unknown type: 2064 (0%)
Type mismatches: 865
Inference: 49.84s, 250747mi
Total: 65.62s, 342310mi
rust-analyzer -q analysis-stats . 66.72s user 0.57s system 99% cpu 1:07.40 total
[WITH this PR]
Database loaded 665.83ms, 284mi
Crates in this dir: 36
Total modules found: 577
Total declarations: 11188
Total functions: 8743
Item Collection: 15.28s, 84919mi
Total expressions: 241229
Expressions of unknown type: 2637 (1%)
Expressions of partially unknown type: 2064 (0%)
Type mismatches: 868
Inference: 30.15s, 135293mi
Total: 45.43s, 220213mi
rust-analyzer -q analysis-stats . 46.26s user 0.74s system 99% cpu 47.294 total
```
*HOWEVER*, it is still a perf regression (35s vs 45s):
```
[WITHOUT this PR]
Database loaded 657.42ms, 284mi
Crates in this dir: 36
Total modules found: 577
Total declarations: 11177
Total functions: 8735
Item Collection: 12.87s, 72407mi
Total expressions: 239380
Expressions of unknown type: 2643 (1%)
Expressions of partially unknown type: 2064 (0%)
Type mismatches: 868
Inference: 22.88s, 97889mi
Total: 35.74s, 170297mi
rust-analyzer -q analysis-stats . 36.71s user 0.63s system 99% cpu 37.498 total
```
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
This is done by adding a `ret_type` method to `hir::Function`.
I followed `assoc_fn_params` convention by creating a new `RetType` type,
that contains the actual return type accessible via a `ty` method.
7068: Add VSCode command to view the hir of a function body r=theotherphil a=theotherphil
Will fix https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7061. Very rough initial version just to work out where I needed to wire everything up.
@matklad would you be happy merging a hir visualiser of some kind? If so, do you have any thoughts on what you'd like it show, and how?
I've spent very little time on this thus far, so I'm fine with throwing away the contents of this PR, but I want to avoid taking the time to make this more polished/interactive/useful only to discover that no-one else has any interest in this functionality.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1974256/103236081-bb58f700-493b-11eb-9d12-55ae1b870f8f.png)
Co-authored-by: Phil Ellison <phil.j.ellison@gmail.com>
7115: Migrate HasSource::source to return Option r=matklad a=nick96
I've made a start on fixing #6913 based on the provided work plan, migrating `HasSource::source` to return an `Option`. The simple cases are migrated but there are a few that I'm unsure exactly how they should be handled:
- Logging the processing of functions in `AnalysisStatsCmd::run`: In verbose mode it includes the path to the module containing the function and the syntax range. I've handled this with an if-let but would it be better to blow up here with `expect`? I'm not 100% on the code paths but if we're processing a function definition then the source should exist.
I've handled `source()` in all code paths as `None` being a valid return value but are there some cases where we should just blow up? Also, all I've done is bubble up the returned `None`s, there may be some places where we can recover and still provide something.
Co-authored-by: Nick Spain <nicholas.spain@stileeducation.com>
Co-authored-by: Nick Spain <nicholas.spain96@gmail.com>
In #6901 some special case handling for proc-macros was introduced to
prevent panicing as they have no AST. Now the new HasSource::source
method is used that returns an option.
Generally this was a pretty trivial change, the only thing of much
interest is that `hir::MacroDef` now implements `TryToNav` not `ToNav`
as this allows us to handle `HasSource::source` now returning an option.
6964: Add full pattern completions for Struct and Variant patterns r=matklad a=Veykril
Just gonna call it full pattern completion as pattern completion is already implemented in a sense by showing idents in pattern position. What this does is basically complete struct and variant patterns where applicable(function params, let statements and refutable pattern locations).
This does not replace just completing the corresponding idents of the structs and variants, instead two completions are shown for these, a completion for the ident itself and a completion for the pattern(if the pattern make sense to be used that is). I figured in some cases one would rather type out the pattern manually if it has a lot of fields but you only care about one since this completion would cause one more work in the end since you would have to delete all the extra matched fields again.
These completions are tagged as `CompletionKind::Snippet`, not sure if that is the right one here.
<details>
<summary>some gifs</summary>
![dx2lxgzhj3](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/102719967-6987ef80-42f1-11eb-8ae0-8aff53777860.gif)
![EP2E7sJLkB](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/102785777-c7264580-439e-11eb-8a64-f142e19fb65b.gif)
![JMNHHWknr9](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/102785796-d1e0da80-439e-11eb-934b-218ada31b51c.gif)
</details>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
6921: Higher-ranked trait bounds for where clauses r=flodiebold a=Veykril
There is a slight problem with this which is also noted in a FIXME now but `LifetimeParameters` of these ForLifetime where clauses allocate the lifetimes in the corresponding arena as if they were lifetimes of the item itself and not just the clause they belong to. I wasn't entirely sure what I could do about this but given nothing really uses lifetimes like that currently I figured it might be fine? Open to suggestions for that problem.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
6901: Temp fixes panic caused by no ast for proc-macro r=maklad a=edwin0cheng
There are some panic when hover/goto definition for proc-macro. It is because in current design, we don't have `ast-node` for proc-macro and then it trigger [this](479d1f7eec/crates/hir/src/has_source.rs (L116)) line to panic.
This PR is a temp fix for all of these similar to bd4c352831/crates/completion/src/render/macro_.rs (L42)
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
We used to have `Def` suffix for all symbols, but we moved off from
that. `FunctionDef` isn't better than `Function`. Looks like we've
forgot to change `Impl` though!
6896: Node-ify lifetimes r=jonas-schievink a=Veykril
Let's see if this passes the tests 🤞
Depends on https://github.com/rust-analyzer/ungrammar/pull/15
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
6897: Basic support for macros 2.0 r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This adds support for (built-in-only) macros 2.0, and removes some hacks used for builtin derives, which are declared via macros 2.0 in libcore.
First steps for https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/2248.
Blocked on https://github.com/rust-analyzer/ungrammar/pull/16.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
6818: Add Lifetimes to the HIR r=matklad a=Veykril
This doesn't handle resolve yet as I don't know yet how that will be used. I'll get to that once I start moving the lifetime reference PR to the hir.
This also adds a new `hir` name type for lifetimes and labels, `hir::LifetimeName`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
6553: Auto imports in completion r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
![completion](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2690773/99155339-ae4fb380-26bf-11eb-805a-655b1706ce70.gif)
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/1062 but does not handle the completion order, since it's a separate task for https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/4922 , https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/4922 and maybe something else.
2 quirks in the current implementation:
* traits are not auto imported during method completion
If I understand the current situation right, we cannot search for traits by a **part** of a method name, we need a full name with correct case to get a trait for it.
* VSCode (?) autocompletion is not as rigid as in Intellij Rust as you can notice on the animation.
Intellij is able to refresh the completions on every new symbol added, yet VS Code does not query the completions on every symbol for me.
With a few debug prints placed in RA, I've observed the following behaviour: after the first set of completion suggestions is received, next symbol input does not trigger a server request, if the completions contain this symbol.
When more symbols added, the existing completion suggestions are filtered out until none are left and only then, on the next symbol it queries for completions.
It seems like the only alternative to get an updated set of results is to manually retrigger it with Esc and Ctrl + Space.
Despite the eerie latter bullet, the completion seems to work pretty fine and fast nontheless, but if you have any ideas on how to make it more smooth, I'll gladly try it out.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
6251: Semantic Highlight: Add Callable modifier for variables r=matklad a=GrayJack
This PR added the `HighlightModifier::Callable` variant and assigned it to variables and parameters that are fn pointers, closures and implements FnOnce trait.
This allows to colorize these variables/parameters when used in call expression.
6310: Rewrite algo::diff to support insertion and deletion r=matklad a=Veykril
This in turn also makes `algo::diff` generate finer diffs(maybe even minimal diffs?) as insertions and deletions aren't always represented as as replacements of parent nodes now.
Required for #6287 to go on.
Co-authored-by: GrayJack <gr41.j4ck@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Declaration names sounds like a name of declaration -- something you
can use for analysis. It empathically isn't, and is just a label
displayed in various UI. It's important not to confuse the two, least
we accidentally mix semantics with UI (I believe, there's already a
case of this in the FamousDefs at least).
6130: Items case quick fix (snake_case / UPPER_SNAKE_CASE / CamelCase) r=matklad a=popzxc
Resolves#4598.
After a third try, it finally works. Boy, it appeared tougher than it seemed.
Initially I thought like "Ha, `rustc` already tells us where idents are named incorrectly. It shouldn't be that hard, should it?".
Well, the problems with the information provided by `rustc` appeared shortly:
- `rustc` warnings are `flycheck` warnings, which are slightly aside from our diagnostics with fixes.
When we map flycheck diagnostic to LSP, we can convert it into a fix, but only if it's marked as `Applicability::MachineApplicable`.
Name case fix is marked `Applicability::MaybeIncorrect`, and for a reason: it only suggest to rename symbol under cursor, without tracking any references.
- Warning spawned by `rustc` are identified by string labels rather than enum. It means that if one day the diagnostic will be renamed in `rustc`, `rust-analyzer` code will still compile, but won't find the required diagnostic by name anymore. If by chance this will happen when some unlucky guy will decide to create their first pull request, they'll be confused by suddenly failing tests (likely) not related to their changes.
- Even if we'll try to build fixes atop of `rustc` warnings, we'll have to do it in the `rust_analyzer::diagnostics::to_proto` module, which is far less
convenient for that matter than `ide` crate.
That's why I decided that it's worth a separate `rust-analyzer` diagnostic, which will implement `DiagnosticWithFix` trait.
After that, I discovered that currently `hir_ty::diagnostics` only check `DefWithBody` types, like function bodies. I had to add support for diagnostics
which look at any `ModuleDef`.
And of course, since I'd added a lot of new functionality, it required extensive testing.
That explains why the diff is so big for a (looking) relatively small feature.
I hope that this PR doesn't only add a small feature, but also creates a base for building another features.
## Example:
![case_quick_fix](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12111581/95008475-e07ee780-0622-11eb-9978-62a9ea0e7782.gif)
P.S. My eyes were bleeding when I had to write the code for the example...
6135: when generating new function, focus on return type instead of body r=matklad a=bnjjj
I made a little change when we use the assist to generate a new function, instead of focusing on the function body, it will focus on return type
Co-authored-by: Igor Aleksanov <popzxc@yandex.ru>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Coenen <5719034+bnjjj@users.noreply.github.com>
5917: Add a command to open docs for the symbol under the cursor r=matklad a=zacps
#### Todo
- [ ] Decide if there should be a default keybind or context menu entry
- [x] Figure out how to get the documentation path for methods and other non-top-level defs
- [x] Design the protocol extension. In future we'll probably want parameters for local/remote documentation URLs, so that should maybe be done in this PR?
- [x] Code organisation
- [x] Tests
Co-authored-by: Zac Pullar-Strecker <zacmps@gmail.com>
Currently a method only has defaultness if it is a provided trait
method, but this will change when specialisation is available and may
need to become a concept known to hir.
I opted to go for a 'fewest changes' approach given specialisation is
still under development.
6124: Better normalized crate name usage r=jonas-schievink a=SomeoneToIgnore
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5343
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5932
Uses normalized name for code snippets (to be able to test the fix), hover messages and documentation rewrite links (are there any tests for those?).
Also renamed the field to better resemble the semantics.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
5846: Add references to fn args during completion r=matklad a=adamrk
When completing a function call, if there is an argument taken as a ref or mut ref which matches the name and type of a variable in scope, we will insert a `&` or `&mut` when filling in the function arguments. This addresses https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5449.
E.g.
```rust
fn foo(x: &i32) {}
fn main() {
let x = 5;
foo # completing foo here generates `foo(&x)` now instead of `foo(x)`
}
```
Co-authored-by: adamrk <ark.email@gmail.com>
5971: Implement async blocks r=flodiebold a=oxalica
Fix#4018
@flodiebold already gave a generic guide in the issue. Here's some concern about implementation detail:
- Chalk doesn't support generator type yet.
- Adding generator type as a brand new type (ctor) can be complex and need to *re-introduced* builtin impls. (Like how we implement closures before native closure support of chalk, which is already removed in #5401 )
- The output type of async block should be known after type inference of the whole body.
- We cannot directly get the type from source like return-positon-impl-trait. But we still need to provide trait bounds when chalk asking for `opaque_ty_data`.
- During the inference, the output type of async block can be temporary unknown and participate the later inference.
`let a = async { None }; let _: i32 = a.await.unwrap();`
So in this PR, the type of async blocks is inferred as an opaque type parameterized by the `Future::Output` type it should be, like what we do with closure type.
And it really works now.
Well, I still have some questions:
- The bounds `AsyncBlockImplType<T>: Future<Output = T>` is currently generated in `opaque_ty_data`. I'm not sure if we should put this code here.
- Type of async block is now rendered as `impl Future<Output = OutputType>`. Do we need to special display to hint that it's a async block? Note that closure type has its special format, instead of `impl Fn(..) -> ..` or function type.
Co-authored-by: oxalica <oxalicc@pm.me>
`hir` should know nothing about URLs, markdown and html. It should
only be able to:
* resolve stringy path from documentation
* generate canonical stringy path for a def
In contrast, link rewriting should not care about semantics of paths
and names resolution, and should be concern only with text mangling
bits.
5643: Add new consuming modifier, apply consuming and mutable to methods r=matklad a=Nashenas88
This adds a new `consuming` semantic modifier for syntax highlighters.
This also emits `mutable` and `consuming` in two cases:
- When a method takes `&mut self`, then it now has `function.mutable` emitted.
- When a method takes `self`, and the type of `Self` is not `Copy`, then `function.consuming` is emitted.
CC @flodiebold
Co-authored-by: Paul Daniel Faria <Nashenas88@users.noreply.github.com>
Conjecture: it's impossible to use hir::Path *correctly* from an IDE.
I am not entirely sure about this, and we might need to add it back at
some point, but I have to arguments that convince me that we probably
won't:
* `hir::Path` has to know about hygiene, which an IDE can't set up
properly.
* `hir::Path` lacks identity, but you actually have to know identity
to resolve it correctly