| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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There's a tension between keeping a well-architectured minimal
orthogonal set of constructs, and providing convenience functions.
Relieve this pressure by introducing an dedicated module for
non-orthogonal shortcuts.
This is inspired by the django.shortcuts module which serves a similar
purpose architecturally.
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8317: Convert tuple struct to named struct assist r=Veykril a=unexge
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8192
Co-authored-by: unexge <[email protected]>
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This adds a "Convert Into to From" assist, useful since clippy has
recently started adding lints on every `Into`.
It covers converting the signature, and converting any `self`/`Self`
references within the body to the correct types.
It does assume that every instance of `Into` can be converted to a
`From`, which I _think_ is the case now. Let me know if there's
something I'm not thinking of and I can try and make it smarter.
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The get function from impl method is updated.
and now same method used to get len and is_empty function.
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the assist will be shown when the len function is implemented.
is_empty internally uses len function.
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7741: Add convert_for_to_iter_for_each assist r=mattyhall a=mattyhall
Implements one direction of #7681
I wonder if this tries to guess too much at the right thing here. A common pattern is:
```rust
let col = vec![1, 2, 3];
for v in &mut col {
*v *= 2;
}
// equivalent to:
col.iter_mut().for_each(|v| *v *= 2);
```
I've tried to detect this case by checking if the expression after the `in` is a (mutable) reference and if not inserting iter()/iter_mut(). This is just a convention used in the stdlib however, so could sometimes be wrong. I'd be happy to make an improvement for this, but not sure what would be best. A few options spring to mind:
1. Only allow this for types that are known to have iter/iter_mut (ie stdlib types)
2. Try to check if iter/iter_mut exists and they return the right iterator type
3. Don't try to do this and just add `.into_iter()` to whatever is after `in`
Co-authored-by: Matt Hall <[email protected]>
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