9c49f6c36e
1216: Basic Chalk integration r=matklad a=flodiebold This replaces the ad-hoc `implements` check by Chalk. It doesn't yet any new functionality (e.g. where clauses aren't passed to Chalk yet). The tests that exist actually work, but it needs some refactoring, currently crashes when running analysis on the RA repo, and depends on rust-lang/chalk#216 which isn't merged yet 😄 The main work here is converting stuff back and forth and providing Chalk with the information it needs, and the canonicalization logic. Since canonicalization depends a lot on the inference table, I don't think we can currently reuse the logic from Chalk, so we need to implement it ourselves; it's not actually that complicated anyway ;) I realized that we need a `Ty::Bound` variant separate from `Ty::Param` -- these are two different things, and I think type parameters inside a function actually need to be represented in Chalk as `Placeholder` types. ~~Currently this crashes in the 'real' world because we don't yet do canonicalization when filtering method candidates. Proper canonicalization needs the inference table (to collapse different inference variables that have already been unified), but we need to be able to call the method candidate selection from the completion code... So I'm currently thinking how to best handle that 😄~~ Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com> |
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.cargo | ||
.vscode | ||
crates | ||
docs | ||
editors | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
bors.toml | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE-APACHE | ||
LICENSE-MIT | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml |
Rust Analyzer
Rust Analyzer is an experimental modular compiler frontend for the Rust language. It is a part of a larger rls-2.0 effort to create excellent IDE support for Rust. If you want to get involved, check the rls-2.0 working group in the compiler-team repository:
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/tree/master/working-groups/rls-2.0
Work on the Rust Analyzer is sponsored by
Language Server Quick Start
Rust Analyzer is a work-in-progress, so you'll have to build it from source, and you might encounter critical bugs. That said, it is complete enough to provide a useful IDE experience and some people use it as a daily driver.
To build rust-analyzer, you need:
- latest stable rust for language server itself
- latest stable npm and VS Code for VS Code extension (
code
should be in path)
For setup for other editors, see ./docs/user.
# clone the repo
$ git clone https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer && cd rust-analyzer
# install both the language server and VS Code extension
$ cargo install-code
# alternatively, install only the server. Binary name is `ra_lsp_server`.
$ cargo install-lsp
Documentation
If you want to contribute to rust-analyzer or just curious about how things work under the hood, check the ./docs/dev folder.
If you want to use rust-analyzer's language server with your editor of choice, check ./docs/user folder. It also contains some tips & tricks to help you be more productive when using rust-analyzer.
Getting in touch
We are on the rust-lang Zulip!
https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/185405-t-compiler.2Frls-2.2E0
Quick Links
- Work List: https://paper.dropbox.com/doc/RLS-2.0-work-list--AZ3BgHKKCtqszbsi3gi6sjchAQ-42vbnxzuKq2lKwW0mkn8Y
- API docs: https://rust-analyzer.github.io/rust-analyzer/ra_ide_api/index.html
- CI: https://travis-ci.org/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer
License
Rust analyzer is primarily distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0).
See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.