//! When specifying SSR rule, you generally want to map one *kind* of thing to //! the same kind of thing: path to path, expression to expression, type to //! type. //! //! The problem is, while this *kind* is generally obvious to the human, the ide //! needs to determine it somehow. We do this in a stupid way -- by pasting SSR //! rule into different contexts and checking what works. use parser::SyntaxKind; use syntax::{ast, AstNode, SyntaxNode}; pub(crate) fn ty(s: &str) -> Result { let template = "type T = {};"; let input = template.replace("{}", s); let parse = syntax::SourceFile::parse(&input); if !parse.errors().is_empty() { return Err(()); } let node = parse.tree().syntax().descendants().find_map(ast::Type::cast).ok_or(())?; Ok(node.syntax().clone()) } pub(crate) fn item(s: &str) -> Result { let template = "{}"; let input = template.replace("{}", s); let parse = syntax::SourceFile::parse(&input); if !parse.errors().is_empty() { return Err(()); } let node = parse.tree().syntax().descendants().find_map(ast::Item::cast).ok_or(())?; Ok(node.syntax().clone()) }