make mir::ProjectionStore-impls pub-accessible
When using RA as a crate the `mir::Place` `projection` is accessible, however there is no way to translate the `ProjectionId` to a `&[PlaceElem]`, as the `ProjectionId::lookup` is private.
Personally, I would only need the `ProjectionId::lookup`-fn to be `pub`, but I don't see any reason why the others should be kept private.. am I missing something `@HKalbasi` ?
Relates to: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/15575
fix: add diagnostics messages for chars and byte literal errors
This PR adds error messages for different invalid byte or character literals.
Fixes#15395
feat: vscode: Support opening local documentation if available
This PR implements the VS code support for opening local documentation (server side support was already implemented in #14662).
[local_docs.webm](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/9659253/715b84dd-4f14-4ba0-a904-749b847eb3d5)
Displaying local instead of web docs can have many benefits:
- the web version may have different features enabled than locally selected
- the standard library may be a different version than is available online
- the user may not be online and therefore cannot access the web documentation
- the documentation may not be available online at all, for example because it is for a new feature in a library the user is currently developing
If the documentation is not available locally, the extension still falls back to the web version.
Closes#12867.
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If my implementation isn't really idiomatic TypeScript: Sorry, I'm not much of a TypeScript developer. I am open to feedback, however.
Displaying local instead of web docs can have many benefits:
- the web version may have different features enabled than locally selected
- the standard library may be a different version than is available online
- the user may not be online and therefore cannot access the web documentation
- the documentation may not be available online at all, for example because it
is for a new feature in a library the user is currently developing
If the documentation is not available locally, the extension still falls back to
the web version.
internal: port anymap
## Description
- The anymap crate has been ported. During this process, unnecessary features for rust-analyzer have been removed.
- From the tests that were checking the existing licenses, the anymap license (`BlueOak-1.0.0 OR MIT OR Apache-2.0`) has been removed.
## Requests
- While porting the code this time, I have tried to respect the original author's intentions and have kept the comments/codes as much as possible. Please don't hesitate to tell me if you think the comments/codes also need to be appropriately modified.
- If there are any necessary changes regarding the licensing or anything else, please let me know so I can fix them.
## Issue
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15500
feat: implement tuple return type to tuple struct assist
This PR implements the `convert_tuple_return_type_to_struct` assist, for converting the return type of a function or method from a tuple to a tuple struct. Additionally, it moves the `to_camel_case` and `char_has_case` functions from `case_conv` to `stdx` so that they can be used similar to `to_lower_snake_case`.
[tuple_return_type_to_tuple_struct.webm](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/52933714/2803ff58-fde3-4144-9495-7c7c7e139075)
Currently, the assist puts the struct definition above the function, or above the nearest `impl` or `trait` if applicable and only rewrites literal tuples that are returned in the body of the function. Additionally, it only attempts to rewrite simple tuple pattern usages with the corresponding tuple struct pattern but does so across files and modules.
I think that this is sufficient for the majority of use cases but I could be wrong. One thing I'm still not sure how to approach is handling `Self` and generics/lifetimes in the tuple type to be extracted. I was thinking of either manually figuring out what lifetimes and generics are in scope and using them (sort of similar to the `generate_function` assist) or maybe using `ctx.sema.resolve_type` and `generic_params` on `hir::Type` but this seems to not deal with lifetimes.
Closes#14293
Add config option to use `rust-analyzer` specific target dir
Adds a Rust Analyzer configuration option to set a custom target directory for builds. This is a workaround for Rust Analyzer blocking debug builds while running `cargo check`. This change should close#6007.
This is my first time contributing to this project, so any feedback regarding best practices that I'm not aware of are greatly appreciated! Thanks to all the maintainers for their hard work on this project and reviewing contributions.
Add dedicated field for `target_dir` in the configurations for Cargo
and Flycheck. Also change the directory to be a `PathBuf` as opposed to
a `String` to be more appropriate to the operating system.
Adds a Rust Analyzer configuration option to set a custom
target directory for builds. This is a workaround for Rust Analyzer
blocking debug builds while running `cargo check`. This change
should close#6007
internal: fix automatic rustc/rustdoc lint generation
Missed in #15680: the output of `-Whelp` changed since the last run so it generated some bad rustdoc lints entries.
Also preemptively fix a `-Whelp` breakage that might get merged in rust-lang/rust#116412
According to the VS Code documentation, the vscode.open command opens the URL
_in the editor_ (https://code.visualstudio.com/api/references/commands).
However, in reality, it seems to do so only for file:// URLs, falling back to
other applications for other URL schemes (at least for HTTP/HTTPS).
Until now, the URL to the documentation was always HTTP based, so using the
vscode.open command was perfectly fine. However, displaying local documentation
will be supported from now on (see next commit). Local documentation is not
HTTP-based, but instead addressed via a file:// URL. The file URL would
therefore be opened in VS Code instead of in the browser — this is definitely
not what the user wants.
Therefore, the vscode.env.openExternal function is used instead, this function
never opens the URL in VS Code.