| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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* Loading configurable scope mappings from settings.
* Updating Readme with `rust-analyzer.scopeMappings`.
`rust-analyzer.scopeMappings` -- a scheme backed JSON object to tweak Rust Analyzer scopes to TextMate scopes.
```jsonc
{
//Will autocomplete keys to available RA scopes.
"keyword.unsafe": ["keyword", "keyword.control"],
//Values are string | TextMateScope | [string | TextMateScope]
"comments": "comment.block"
}
```
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1980: Shorten inline type hints r=matklad a=detrumi
Implements #1946
Co-authored-by: Wilco Kusee <[email protected]>
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1984: Bump rollup and vsce r=matklad a=kjeremy
I got sick of the vsce warning on install and noticed that rollup was also out of date.
Co-authored-by: kjeremy <[email protected]>
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The old `vscode` package is outdated and it is recommened to switch to
these two new packages. This also solves a problem of a missing `.d.ts`
for `vscode` in Nixos.
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1614: show prettier diff on CI r=matklad a=matklad
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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This is actually much faster than I expected; it takes about 13 seconds
to download VS Code and run the unit tests. This means the VS Code tests
are still significantly faster than the Rust ones.
If this ends up being unreliable we can always remove it later or move
it to a separate optional job.
We also need to ignore the `.vscode-test` directory when running
`prettier` or it will get upset about some temporary JSON files VS Code
creates.
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As promised in #1439 this is an initial attempt at unit testing the
VSCode extension. There are two separate parts to this: getting the test
framework working and unit testing the code in #1439.
The test framework nearly intact from the VSCode extension generator.
The main thing missing was `test/index.ts` which acts as an entry point
for Mocha. This was simply copied back in. I also needed to open the
test VSCode instance inside a workspace as our file URI generation
depends on a workspace being open.
There are two ways to run the test framework:
1. Opening the extension's source in VSCode, pressing F5 and selecting
the "Extensions Test" debug target.
2. Closing all copies of VSCode and running `npm test`. This is started
from the command line but actually opens a temporary VSCode window to
host the tests.
This doesn't attempt to wire this up to CI. That requires running a
headless X11 server which is a bit daunting. I'll assess the difficulty
of that in a follow-up branch. This PR is at least helpful for local
development without having to induce errors on a Rust project.
For the actual tests this uses snapshots of `rustc` output from a real
Rust project captured from the command line. Except for extracting the
`message` object and reformatting they're copied verbatim into fixture
JSON files.
Only four different types of diagnostics are tested but they represent
the main combinations of code actions and related information possible.
They can be considered the happy path tests; as we encounter
corner-cases we can introduce new tests fixtures.
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Co-Authored-By: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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Very simple approach: For each identifier, set the hash of the range
where it's defined as its 'id' and use it in the VSCode extension to
generate unique colors.
Thus, the generated colors are per-file. They are also quite fragile,
and I'm not entirely sure why. Looks like we need to make sure the
same ranges aren't overwritten by a later request?
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This fixes #1005.
Defaults to `ask` which prompts users each time whether to start `cargo watch`
or not. `enabled` always starts `cargo watch` and `disabled` does not.
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