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1000: Clean up some documentation debt r=Xanewok a=matklad
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <[email protected]>
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Co-Authored-By: matklad <[email protected]>
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999: Fixed typo in `Interner`’s name (`Intener`) r=matklad a=regexident
Co-authored-by: Vincent Esche <[email protected]>
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998: import resolution is immutable r=matklad a=matklad
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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996: Allow attributes on top level expressions r=matklad a=pcpthm
This PR modifies parser to allow outer attributes on top level expression. Here, top level expression means either
- Expression statement e.g. `foo();`
- Last expression in a block without semicolon `bar()` in `{ foo(); bar() }`.
Except for binary operation expressions and `if` expressions, which are errors (feature gated) in rustc.
Attributes on inner expressions like `foo(#[a] 1)` are not implemented.
I first tried to implement this by passing `Maker` to expression parsers. However, this implementation couldn't parse `#[attr] foo()` correctly as `CallExpr(Attr(..), PathExpr(..), ArgList(..))` and instead parsed incorrectly as `CallExpr(PathExpr(Attr(..), ..), ArgList(..))` due to the way left recursion is handled.
In the end, I introduce `undo_completion` method. Which is not the suggested approach, but it seems not very bad.
Fix #759.
Co-authored-by: pcpthm <[email protected]>
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unallowed types of expression statement
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A top level expression is either
- a expression statement or
- the last expression in a block
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995: Install and run `cargo watch` if user agrees r=matklad a=Xanewok
This isn't a glorious patch but hopefully is useful :+1: This introduces a default background `cargo watch` task and (separately from that) asks the user on every startup if they want to run `cargo watch` (installs it if it's not available).
r? @matklad does it fit the what you've been thinking about?
Co-authored-by: Igor Matuszewski <[email protected]>
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This gives us much more fine-grained stdout buffering and ANSI terminal colors.
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993: Fix installing vscode extension on MacOS r=matklad a=funkill
VSCode often installed in MacOS as `Visual Studio Code.app` package and `code` binary located at `Contents/Resources/app/bin` in package. This path not exists in `$PATH` variable and we can't run `code`.
In previous version of `do_run` function all before space was command and all after - arguments. If path or command has spaces, extracting command breaks. To fix this i extracted command to separated argument of function.
All packages can be placed in system app dir (`/Applications`) or user app dir (`~/Applications`). I created helper function for find app in this directories.
Co-authored-by: funkill2 <[email protected]>
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994: Upgrade ra_vfs to use new Filtering r=matklad a=vipentti
Upgrade `ra_vfs` to `0.2.0` that includes the filtering.
Currently this matches the previous filtering, meaning all roots are filtered
using the same rules.
Co-authored-by: Ville Penttinen <[email protected]>
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Currently this matches the previous filtering, meaning all roots are filtered
using the same rules.
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991: Use Marker argument for item parsers r=matklad a=pcpthm
Before doing this for expressions, I found that the pattern (Marker argument) should be applied to the item parsers because visiblity and modifiers are parsed in a separate function.
Fixed some parser bugs:
- Fix pub_expr: `pub 42;` was allowed.
- Fix incorrect parsing of crate::path: incorrectly parsed as `crate` as a visibility.
Co-authored-by: pcpthm <[email protected]>
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- Fix pub_expr
- Fix incorrect parsing of crate::path
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989: Implement naive version of fill_struct_fields assist r=matklad a=yanchith
Fixes #964
This implements the `fill_struct_fields` assist. Currently only works for named struct fields, but not for tuple structs, because we seem to be missing a `TupleStructLit` (akin to `StructLit`, but for tuple structs). I am happy to implement `TupleStructLit` parsing given some guidance (provided it's really missing) and make the assist work for tuple structs as well. Could do so either in this PR, or another one 🙂
Sorry if I missed something important, this is my first PR for Rust Analyzer.
Btw is there any way to run the assists in emacs?
UPDATE: I just realized that parsing `TupleStructLit` would be quite difficult as it it really similar, if not identical to a function call...
Co-authored-by: yanchith <[email protected]>
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