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5586: Add workaround for changing sysroot paths r=jonas-schievink a=lnicola
Fixes #5577
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <[email protected]>
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5587: Finish use grammar r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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5567: SSR: Wrap placeholder expansions in parenthesis when necessary r=matklad a=davidlattimore
e.g. `foo($a) ==> $a.to_string()` should produce `(1 + 2).to_string()` not `1 + 2.to_string()`
We don't yet try to determine if the whole replacement needs to be wrapped in parenthesis. That's harder and I think perhaps less often an issue.
Co-authored-by: David Lattimore <[email protected]>
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e.g. `foo($a) ==> $a.to_string()` should produce `(1 + 2).to_string()`
not `1 + 2.to_string()`
We don't yet try to determine if the whole replacement needs to be
wrapped in parenthesis. That's harder and I think perhaps less often an
issue.
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5584: Rename metric r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
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Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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They hopefully will be more stable on CI
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Gotta be optimistic about those memory usage optimizations
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5578: Rename ModuleItem -> Item r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
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Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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5554: Fix remove_dbg r=matklad a=petr-tik
Closes #5129
Addresses two issues:
- keep the parens from dbg!() in case the call is chained or there is
semantic difference if parens are excluded
- Exclude the semicolon after the dbg!(); by checking if it was
accidentally included in the macro_call
investigated, but decided against:
fix ast::MacroCall extraction to never include semicolons at the end -
this logic lives in rowan.
Defensively shorten the macro_range if there is a semicolon token.
Deleted unneccessary temp variable macro_args
Renamed macro_content to "paste_instead_of_dbg", because it isn't a
simple extraction of text inside dbg!() anymore
Co-authored-by: petr-tik <[email protected]>
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replaced match with let-if variable assignment
removed the unnecessary semicolon_on_end variable
converted all code and expected test variables to raw strings
and inlined them in asserts
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Addresses two issues:
- keep the parens from dbg!() in case the call is chained or there is
semantic difference if parens are excluded
- Exclude the semicolon after the dbg!(); by checking if it was
accidentally included in the macro_call
investigated, but decided against:
fix ast::MacroCall extraction to never include semicolons at the end -
this logic lives in rowan.
Defensively shorten the macro_range if there is a semicolon token.
Deleted unneccessary temp variable macro_args
Renamed macro_content to "paste_instead_of_dbg", because it isn't a
simple extraction of text inside dbg!() anymore
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5563: Check all targets for package-level tasks r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
When invoking "Select Runnable" with the caret on a runnable with a specific target (test, bench, binary), append the corresponding argument for the `cargo check -p` module runnable.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <[email protected]>
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Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <[email protected]>
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The primary advantage of ungrammar is that it (eventually) allows one
to describe concrete syntax tree structure -- with alternatives and
specific sequence of tokens & nodes.
That should be re-usable for:
* generate `make` calls
* Rust reference
* Hypothetical parser's evented API
We loose doc comments for the time being unfortunately. I don't think
we should add support for doc comments to ungrammar -- they'll make
grammar file hard to read. We might supply docs as out-of band info,
or maybe just via a reference, but we'll think about that once things
are no longer in flux
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5564: SSR: Restrict to current selection if any r=davidlattimore a=davidlattimore
The selection is also used to avoid unnecessary work, but only to the file level. Further restricting unnecessary work is left for later.
Co-authored-by: David Lattimore <[email protected]>
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The selection is also used to avoid unnecessary work, but only to the
file level. Further restricting unnecessary work is left for later.
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5565: SSR: Don't mix non-path-based rules with path-based r=matklad a=davidlattimore
If any rules contain paths, then we reject any rules that don't contain paths. Allowing a mix leads to strange semantics, since the path-based rules only match things where the path refers to semantically the same thing, whereas the non-path-based rules could match anything. Specifically, if we have a rule like `foo ==>> bar` we only want to match the `foo` that is in the current scope, not any `foo`. However "foo" can be parsed as a pattern (BIND_PAT -> NAME -> IDENT). Allowing such a rule through would result in renaming everything called `foo` to `bar`. It'd also be slow, since without a path, we'd have to use the slow-scan search mechanism.
Co-authored-by: David Lattimore <[email protected]>
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If any rules contain paths, then we reject any rules that don't contain paths. Allowing a mix leads to strange semantics, since the path-based rules only match things where the path refers to semantically the same thing, whereas the non-path-based rules could match anything. Specifically, if we have a rule like `foo ==>> bar` we only want to match the `foo` that is in the current scope, not any `foo`. However "foo" can be parsed as a pattern (BIND_PAT -> NAME -> IDENT). Allowing such a rule through would result in renaming everything called `foo` to `bar`. It'd also be slow, since without a path, we'd have to use the slow-scan search mechanism.
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