From 349e6c62ada1fa45a8b80edb877b5e7c9d0c306d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pavan Kumar Sunkara Date: Thu, 13 Aug 2020 02:57:26 +0200 Subject: Rename ra_proc_macro_srv -> proc_macro_srv --- crates/ra_proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro/mod.rs | 926 ------------------------- 1 file changed, 926 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 crates/ra_proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro/mod.rs (limited to 'crates/ra_proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro/mod.rs') diff --git a/crates/ra_proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro/mod.rs b/crates/ra_proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro/mod.rs deleted file mode 100644 index ee0dc9722..000000000 --- a/crates/ra_proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro/mod.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,926 +0,0 @@ -//! lib-proc-macro main module -//! -//! Copy from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/6050e523bae6de61de4e060facc43dc512adaccd/src/libproc_macro/lib.rs -//! augmented with removing unstable features - -// NOTE(@edwin0cheng): -// Because we just copy the bridge module from rustc for ABI compatible -// There are some unused stuffs inside it. -// We suppress these warning here. -#[doc(hidden)] -#[allow(unused_macros)] -#[allow(unused_variables)] -pub mod bridge; - -mod diagnostic; - -pub use diagnostic::{Diagnostic, Level, MultiSpan}; - -use std::ops::{Bound, RangeBounds}; -use std::path::PathBuf; -use std::str::FromStr; -use std::{fmt, iter, mem}; - -/// The main type provided by this crate, representing an abstract stream of -/// tokens, or, more specifically, a sequence of token trees. -/// The type provide interfaces for iterating over those token trees and, conversely, -/// collecting a number of token trees into one stream. -/// -/// This is both the input and output of `#[proc_macro]`, `#[proc_macro_attribute]` -/// and `#[proc_macro_derive]` definitions. -#[derive(Clone)] -pub struct TokenStream(bridge::client::TokenStream); - -/// Error returned from `TokenStream::from_str` -#[derive(Debug)] -pub struct LexError { - _inner: (), -} - -impl TokenStream { - /// Returns an empty `TokenStream` containing no token trees. - pub fn new() -> TokenStream { - TokenStream(bridge::client::TokenStream::new()) - } - - /// Checks if this `TokenStream` is empty. - pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { - self.0.is_empty() - } -} - -/// Attempts to break the string into tokens and parse those tokens into a token stream. -/// May fail for a number of reasons, for example, if the string contains unbalanced delimiters -/// or characters not existing in the language. -/// All tokens in the parsed stream get `Span::call_site()` spans. -/// -/// NOTE: some errors may cause panics instead of returning `LexError`. We reserve the right to -/// change these errors into `LexError`s later. -impl FromStr for TokenStream { - type Err = LexError; - - fn from_str(src: &str) -> Result { - Ok(TokenStream(bridge::client::TokenStream::from_str(src))) - } -} - -// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display` -// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two). -// impl ToString for TokenStream { -// fn to_string(&self) -> String { -// self.0.to_string() -// } -// } - -/// Prints the token stream as a string that is supposed to be losslessly convertible back -/// into the same token stream (modulo spans), except for possibly `TokenTree::Group`s -/// with `Delimiter::None` delimiters and negative numeric literals. -impl fmt::Display for TokenStream { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(&self.to_string()) - } -} - -/// Prints token in a form convenient for debugging. -impl fmt::Debug for TokenStream { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str("TokenStream ")?; - f.debug_list().entries(self.clone()).finish() - } -} - -/// Creates a token stream containing a single token tree. -impl From for TokenStream { - fn from(tree: TokenTree) -> TokenStream { - TokenStream(bridge::client::TokenStream::from_token_tree(match tree { - TokenTree::Group(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Group(tt.0), - TokenTree::Punct(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Punct(tt.0), - TokenTree::Ident(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Ident(tt.0), - TokenTree::Literal(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Literal(tt.0), - })) - } -} - -/// Collects a number of token trees into a single stream. -impl iter::FromIterator for TokenStream { - fn from_iter>(trees: I) -> Self { - trees.into_iter().map(TokenStream::from).collect() - } -} - -/// A "flattening" operation on token streams, collects token trees -/// from multiple token streams into a single stream. -impl iter::FromIterator for TokenStream { - fn from_iter>(streams: I) -> Self { - let mut builder = bridge::client::TokenStreamBuilder::new(); - streams.into_iter().for_each(|stream| builder.push(stream.0)); - TokenStream(builder.build()) - } -} - -impl Extend for TokenStream { - fn extend>(&mut self, trees: I) { - self.extend(trees.into_iter().map(TokenStream::from)); - } -} - -impl Extend for TokenStream { - fn extend>(&mut self, streams: I) { - // FIXME(eddyb) Use an optimized implementation if/when possible. - *self = iter::once(mem::replace(self, Self::new())).chain(streams).collect(); - } -} - -/// Public implementation details for the `TokenStream` type, such as iterators. -pub mod token_stream { - use crate::proc_macro::{bridge, Group, Ident, Literal, Punct, TokenStream, TokenTree}; - - /// An iterator over `TokenStream`'s `TokenTree`s. - /// The iteration is "shallow", e.g., the iterator doesn't recurse into delimited groups, - /// and returns whole groups as token trees. - #[derive(Clone)] - pub struct IntoIter(bridge::client::TokenStreamIter); - - impl Iterator for IntoIter { - type Item = TokenTree; - - fn next(&mut self) -> Option { - self.0.next().map(|tree| match tree { - bridge::TokenTree::Group(tt) => TokenTree::Group(Group(tt)), - bridge::TokenTree::Punct(tt) => TokenTree::Punct(Punct(tt)), - bridge::TokenTree::Ident(tt) => TokenTree::Ident(Ident(tt)), - bridge::TokenTree::Literal(tt) => TokenTree::Literal(Literal(tt)), - }) - } - } - - impl IntoIterator for TokenStream { - type Item = TokenTree; - type IntoIter = IntoIter; - - fn into_iter(self) -> IntoIter { - IntoIter(self.0.into_iter()) - } - } -} - -/// A region of source code, along with macro expansion information. -#[derive(Copy, Clone)] -pub struct Span(bridge::client::Span); - -macro_rules! diagnostic_method { - ($name:ident, $level:expr) => { - /// Creates a new `Diagnostic` with the given `message` at the span - /// `self`. - pub fn $name>(self, message: T) -> Diagnostic { - Diagnostic::spanned(self, $level, message) - } - }; -} - -impl Span { - /// A span that resolves at the macro definition site. - pub fn def_site() -> Span { - Span(bridge::client::Span::def_site()) - } - - /// The span of the invocation of the current procedural macro. - /// Identifiers created with this span will be resolved as if they were written - /// directly at the macro call location (call-site hygiene) and other code - /// at the macro call site will be able to refer to them as well. - pub fn call_site() -> Span { - Span(bridge::client::Span::call_site()) - } - - /// A span that represents `macro_rules` hygiene, and sometimes resolves at the macro - /// definition site (local variables, labels, `$crate`) and sometimes at the macro - /// call site (everything else). - /// The span location is taken from the call-site. - pub fn mixed_site() -> Span { - Span(bridge::client::Span::mixed_site()) - } - - /// The original source file into which this span points. - pub fn source_file(&self) -> SourceFile { - SourceFile(self.0.source_file()) - } - - /// The `Span` for the tokens in the previous macro expansion from which - /// `self` was generated from, if any. - pub fn parent(&self) -> Option { - self.0.parent().map(Span) - } - - /// The span for the origin source code that `self` was generated from. If - /// this `Span` wasn't generated from other macro expansions then the return - /// value is the same as `*self`. - pub fn source(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.source()) - } - - /// Gets the starting line/column in the source file for this span. - pub fn start(&self) -> LineColumn { - self.0.start() - } - - /// Gets the ending line/column in the source file for this span. - pub fn end(&self) -> LineColumn { - self.0.end() - } - - /// Creates a new span encompassing `self` and `other`. - /// - /// Returns `None` if `self` and `other` are from different files. - pub fn join(&self, other: Span) -> Option { - self.0.join(other.0).map(Span) - } - - /// Creates a new span with the same line/column information as `self` but - /// that resolves symbols as though it were at `other`. - pub fn resolved_at(&self, other: Span) -> Span { - Span(self.0.resolved_at(other.0)) - } - - /// Creates a new span with the same name resolution behavior as `self` but - /// with the line/column information of `other`. - pub fn located_at(&self, other: Span) -> Span { - other.resolved_at(*self) - } - - /// Compares to spans to see if they're equal. - pub fn eq(&self, other: &Span) -> bool { - self.0 == other.0 - } - - /// Returns the source text behind a span. This preserves the original source - /// code, including spaces and comments. It only returns a result if the span - /// corresponds to real source code. - /// - /// Note: The observable result of a macro should only rely on the tokens and - /// not on this source text. The result of this function is a best effort to - /// be used for diagnostics only. - pub fn source_text(&self) -> Option { - self.0.source_text() - } - - diagnostic_method!(error, Level::Error); - diagnostic_method!(warning, Level::Warning); - diagnostic_method!(note, Level::Note); - diagnostic_method!(help, Level::Help); -} - -/// Prints a span in a form convenient for debugging. -impl fmt::Debug for Span { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - self.0.fmt(f) - } -} - -/// A line-column pair representing the start or end of a `Span`. -#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)] -pub struct LineColumn { - /// The 1-indexed line in the source file on which the span starts or ends (inclusive). - pub line: usize, - /// The 0-indexed column (in UTF-8 characters) in the source file on which - /// the span starts or ends (inclusive). - pub column: usize, -} - -/// The source file of a given `Span`. -#[derive(Clone)] -pub struct SourceFile(bridge::client::SourceFile); - -impl SourceFile { - /// Gets the path to this source file. - /// - /// ### Note - /// If the code span associated with this `SourceFile` was generated by an external macro, this - /// macro, this may not be an actual path on the filesystem. Use [`is_real`] to check. - /// - /// Also note that even if `is_real` returns `true`, if `--remap-path-prefix` was passed on - /// the command line, the path as given may not actually be valid. - /// - /// [`is_real`]: #method.is_real - pub fn path(&self) -> PathBuf { - PathBuf::from(self.0.path()) - } - - /// Returns `true` if this source file is a real source file, and not generated by an external - /// macro's expansion. - pub fn is_real(&self) -> bool { - // This is a hack until intercrate spans are implemented and we can have real source files - // for spans generated in external macros. - // https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/43604#issuecomment-333334368 - self.0.is_real() - } -} - -impl fmt::Debug for SourceFile { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.debug_struct("SourceFile") - .field("path", &self.path()) - .field("is_real", &self.is_real()) - .finish() - } -} - -impl PartialEq for SourceFile { - fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool { - self.0.eq(&other.0) - } -} - -impl Eq for SourceFile {} - -/// A single token or a delimited sequence of token trees (e.g., `[1, (), ..]`). -#[derive(Clone)] -pub enum TokenTree { - /// A token stream surrounded by bracket delimiters. - Group(Group), - /// An identifier. - Ident(Ident), - /// A single punctuation character (`+`, `,`, `$`, etc.). - Punct(Punct), - /// A literal character (`'a'`), string (`"hello"`), number (`2.3`), etc. - Literal(Literal), -} - -impl TokenTree { - /// Returns the span of this tree, delegating to the `span` method of - /// the contained token or a delimited stream. - pub fn span(&self) -> Span { - match *self { - TokenTree::Group(ref t) => t.span(), - TokenTree::Ident(ref t) => t.span(), - TokenTree::Punct(ref t) => t.span(), - TokenTree::Literal(ref t) => t.span(), - } - } - - /// Configures the span for *only this token*. - /// - /// Note that if this token is a `Group` then this method will not configure - /// the span of each of the internal tokens, this will simply delegate to - /// the `set_span` method of each variant. - pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) { - match *self { - TokenTree::Group(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span), - TokenTree::Ident(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span), - TokenTree::Punct(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span), - TokenTree::Literal(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span), - } - } -} - -/// Prints token tree in a form convenient for debugging. -impl fmt::Debug for TokenTree { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - // Each of these has the name in the struct type in the derived debug, - // so don't bother with an extra layer of indirection - match *self { - TokenTree::Group(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f), - TokenTree::Ident(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f), - TokenTree::Punct(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f), - TokenTree::Literal(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f), - } - } -} - -impl From for TokenTree { - fn from(g: Group) -> TokenTree { - TokenTree::Group(g) - } -} - -impl From for TokenTree { - fn from(g: Ident) -> TokenTree { - TokenTree::Ident(g) - } -} - -impl From for TokenTree { - fn from(g: Punct) -> TokenTree { - TokenTree::Punct(g) - } -} - -impl From for TokenTree { - fn from(g: Literal) -> TokenTree { - TokenTree::Literal(g) - } -} - -// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display` -// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two). -// impl ToString for TokenTree { -// fn to_string(&self) -> String { -// match *self { -// TokenTree::Group(ref t) => t.to_string(), -// TokenTree::Ident(ref t) => t.to_string(), -// TokenTree::Punct(ref t) => t.to_string(), -// TokenTree::Literal(ref t) => t.to_string(), -// } -// } -// } - -/// Prints the token tree as a string that is supposed to be losslessly convertible back -/// into the same token tree (modulo spans), except for possibly `TokenTree::Group`s -/// with `Delimiter::None` delimiters and negative numeric literals. -impl fmt::Display for TokenTree { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(&self.to_string()) - } -} - -/// A delimited token stream. -/// -/// A `Group` internally contains a `TokenStream` which is surrounded by `Delimiter`s. -#[derive(Clone)] -pub struct Group(bridge::client::Group); - -/// Describes how a sequence of token trees is delimited. -#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)] -pub enum Delimiter { - /// `( ... )` - Parenthesis, - /// `{ ... }` - Brace, - /// `[ ... ]` - Bracket, - /// `Ø ... Ø` - /// An implicit delimiter, that may, for example, appear around tokens coming from a - /// "macro variable" `$var`. It is important to preserve operator priorities in cases like - /// `$var * 3` where `$var` is `1 + 2`. - /// Implicit delimiters may not survive roundtrip of a token stream through a string. - None, -} - -impl Group { - /// Creates a new `Group` with the given delimiter and token stream. - /// - /// This constructor will set the span for this group to - /// `Span::call_site()`. To change the span you can use the `set_span` - /// method below. - pub fn new(delimiter: Delimiter, stream: TokenStream) -> Group { - Group(bridge::client::Group::new(delimiter, stream.0)) - } - - /// Returns the delimiter of this `Group` - pub fn delimiter(&self) -> Delimiter { - self.0.delimiter() - } - - /// Returns the `TokenStream` of tokens that are delimited in this `Group`. - /// - /// Note that the returned token stream does not include the delimiter - /// returned above. - pub fn stream(&self) -> TokenStream { - TokenStream(self.0.stream()) - } - - /// Returns the span for the delimiters of this token stream, spanning the - /// entire `Group`. - /// - /// ```text - /// pub fn span(&self) -> Span { - /// ^^^^^^^ - /// ``` - pub fn span(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.span()) - } - - /// Returns the span pointing to the opening delimiter of this group. - /// - /// ```text - /// pub fn span_open(&self) -> Span { - /// ^ - /// ``` - pub fn span_open(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.span_open()) - } - - /// Returns the span pointing to the closing delimiter of this group. - /// - /// ```text - /// pub fn span_close(&self) -> Span { - /// ^ - /// ``` - pub fn span_close(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.span_close()) - } - - /// Configures the span for this `Group`'s delimiters, but not its internal - /// tokens. - /// - /// This method will **not** set the span of all the internal tokens spanned - /// by this group, but rather it will only set the span of the delimiter - /// tokens at the level of the `Group`. - pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) { - self.0.set_span(span.0); - } -} - -// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display` -// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two). -// impl ToString for Group { -// fn to_string(&self) -> String { -// TokenStream::from(TokenTree::from(self.clone())).to_string() -// } -// } - -/// Prints the group as a string that should be losslessly convertible back -/// into the same group (modulo spans), except for possibly `TokenTree::Group`s -/// with `Delimiter::None` delimiters. -impl fmt::Display for Group { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(&self.to_string()) - } -} - -impl fmt::Debug for Group { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.debug_struct("Group") - .field("delimiter", &self.delimiter()) - .field("stream", &self.stream()) - .field("span", &self.span()) - .finish() - } -} - -/// An `Punct` is an single punctuation character like `+`, `-` or `#`. -/// -/// Multi-character operators like `+=` are represented as two instances of `Punct` with different -/// forms of `Spacing` returned. -#[derive(Clone)] -pub struct Punct(bridge::client::Punct); - -/// Whether an `Punct` is followed immediately by another `Punct` or -/// followed by another token or whitespace. -#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)] -pub enum Spacing { - /// e.g., `+` is `Alone` in `+ =`, `+ident` or `+()`. - Alone, - /// e.g., `+` is `Joint` in `+=` or `'#`. - /// Additionally, single quote `'` can join with identifiers to form lifetimes `'ident`. - Joint, -} - -impl Punct { - /// Creates a new `Punct` from the given character and spacing. - /// The `ch` argument must be a valid punctuation character permitted by the language, - /// otherwise the function will panic. - /// - /// The returned `Punct` will have the default span of `Span::call_site()` - /// which can be further configured with the `set_span` method below. - pub fn new(ch: char, spacing: Spacing) -> Punct { - Punct(bridge::client::Punct::new(ch, spacing)) - } - - /// Returns the value of this punctuation character as `char`. - pub fn as_char(&self) -> char { - self.0.as_char() - } - - /// Returns the spacing of this punctuation character, indicating whether it's immediately - /// followed by another `Punct` in the token stream, so they can potentially be combined into - /// a multi-character operator (`Joint`), or it's followed by some other token or whitespace - /// (`Alone`) so the operator has certainly ended. - pub fn spacing(&self) -> Spacing { - self.0.spacing() - } - - /// Returns the span for this punctuation character. - pub fn span(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.span()) - } - - /// Configure the span for this punctuation character. - pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) { - self.0 = self.0.with_span(span.0); - } -} - -// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display` -// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two). -// impl ToString for Punct { -// fn to_string(&self) -> String { -// TokenStream::from(TokenTree::from(self.clone())).to_string() -// } -// } - -/// Prints the punctuation character as a string that should be losslessly convertible -/// back into the same character. -impl fmt::Display for Punct { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(&self.to_string()) - } -} - -impl fmt::Debug for Punct { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.debug_struct("Punct") - .field("ch", &self.as_char()) - .field("spacing", &self.spacing()) - .field("span", &self.span()) - .finish() - } -} - -/// An identifier (`ident`). -#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)] -pub struct Ident(bridge::client::Ident); - -impl Ident { - /// Creates a new `Ident` with the given `string` as well as the specified - /// `span`. - /// The `string` argument must be a valid identifier permitted by the - /// language, otherwise the function will panic. - /// - /// Note that `span`, currently in rustc, configures the hygiene information - /// for this identifier. - /// - /// As of this time `Span::call_site()` explicitly opts-in to "call-site" hygiene - /// meaning that identifiers created with this span will be resolved as if they were written - /// directly at the location of the macro call, and other code at the macro call site will be - /// able to refer to them as well. - /// - /// Later spans like `Span::def_site()` will allow to opt-in to "definition-site" hygiene - /// meaning that identifiers created with this span will be resolved at the location of the - /// macro definition and other code at the macro call site will not be able to refer to them. - /// - /// Due to the current importance of hygiene this constructor, unlike other - /// tokens, requires a `Span` to be specified at construction. - pub fn new(string: &str, span: Span) -> Ident { - Ident(bridge::client::Ident::new(string, span.0, false)) - } - - /// Same as `Ident::new`, but creates a raw identifier (`r#ident`). - pub fn new_raw(string: &str, span: Span) -> Ident { - Ident(bridge::client::Ident::new(string, span.0, true)) - } - - /// Returns the span of this `Ident`, encompassing the entire string returned - /// by `as_str`. - pub fn span(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.span()) - } - - /// Configures the span of this `Ident`, possibly changing its hygiene context. - pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) { - self.0 = self.0.with_span(span.0); - } -} - -// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display` -// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two). -// impl ToString for Ident { -// fn to_string(&self) -> String { -// TokenStream::from(TokenTree::from(self.clone())).to_string() -// } -// } - -/// Prints the identifier as a string that should be losslessly convertible -/// back into the same identifier. -impl fmt::Display for Ident { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(&self.to_string()) - } -} - -impl fmt::Debug for Ident { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.debug_struct("Ident") - .field("ident", &self.to_string()) - .field("span", &self.span()) - .finish() - } -} - -/// A literal string (`"hello"`), byte string (`b"hello"`), -/// character (`'a'`), byte character (`b'a'`), an integer or floating point number -/// with or without a suffix (`1`, `1u8`, `2.3`, `2.3f32`). -/// Boolean literals like `true` and `false` do not belong here, they are `Ident`s. -#[derive(Clone)] -pub struct Literal(bridge::client::Literal); - -macro_rules! suffixed_int_literals { - ($($name:ident => $kind:ident,)*) => ($( - /// Creates a new suffixed integer literal with the specified value. - /// - /// This function will create an integer like `1u32` where the integer - /// value specified is the first part of the token and the integral is - /// also suffixed at the end. - /// Literals created from negative numbers may not survive round-trips through - /// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal). - /// - /// Literals created through this method have the `Span::call_site()` - /// span by default, which can be configured with the `set_span` method - /// below. - pub fn $name(n: $kind) -> Literal { - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::typed_integer(&n.to_string(), stringify!($kind))) - } - )*) -} - -macro_rules! unsuffixed_int_literals { - ($($name:ident => $kind:ident,)*) => ($( - /// Creates a new unsuffixed integer literal with the specified value. - /// - /// This function will create an integer like `1` where the integer - /// value specified is the first part of the token. No suffix is - /// specified on this token, meaning that invocations like - /// `Literal::i8_unsuffixed(1)` are equivalent to - /// `Literal::u32_unsuffixed(1)`. - /// Literals created from negative numbers may not survive rountrips through - /// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal). - /// - /// Literals created through this method have the `Span::call_site()` - /// span by default, which can be configured with the `set_span` method - /// below. - pub fn $name(n: $kind) -> Literal { - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::integer(&n.to_string())) - } - )*) -} - -impl Literal { - suffixed_int_literals! { - u8_suffixed => u8, - u16_suffixed => u16, - u32_suffixed => u32, - u64_suffixed => u64, - u128_suffixed => u128, - usize_suffixed => usize, - i8_suffixed => i8, - i16_suffixed => i16, - i32_suffixed => i32, - i64_suffixed => i64, - i128_suffixed => i128, - isize_suffixed => isize, - } - - unsuffixed_int_literals! { - u8_unsuffixed => u8, - u16_unsuffixed => u16, - u32_unsuffixed => u32, - u64_unsuffixed => u64, - u128_unsuffixed => u128, - usize_unsuffixed => usize, - i8_unsuffixed => i8, - i16_unsuffixed => i16, - i32_unsuffixed => i32, - i64_unsuffixed => i64, - i128_unsuffixed => i128, - isize_unsuffixed => isize, - } - - /// Creates a new unsuffixed floating-point literal. - /// - /// This constructor is similar to those like `Literal::i8_unsuffixed` where - /// the float's value is emitted directly into the token but no suffix is - /// used, so it may be inferred to be a `f64` later in the compiler. - /// Literals created from negative numbers may not survive rountrips through - /// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal). - /// - /// # Panics - /// - /// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for - /// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic. - pub fn f32_unsuffixed(n: f32) -> Literal { - if !n.is_finite() { - panic!("Invalid float literal {}", n); - } - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::float(&n.to_string())) - } - - /// Creates a new suffixed floating-point literal. - /// - /// This constructor will create a literal like `1.0f32` where the value - /// specified is the preceding part of the token and `f32` is the suffix of - /// the token. This token will always be inferred to be an `f32` in the - /// compiler. - /// Literals created from negative numbers may not survive rountrips through - /// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal). - /// - /// # Panics - /// - /// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for - /// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic. - pub fn f32_suffixed(n: f32) -> Literal { - if !n.is_finite() { - panic!("Invalid float literal {}", n); - } - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::f32(&n.to_string())) - } - - /// Creates a new unsuffixed floating-point literal. - /// - /// This constructor is similar to those like `Literal::i8_unsuffixed` where - /// the float's value is emitted directly into the token but no suffix is - /// used, so it may be inferred to be a `f64` later in the compiler. - /// Literals created from negative numbers may not survive rountrips through - /// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal). - /// - /// # Panics - /// - /// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for - /// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic. - pub fn f64_unsuffixed(n: f64) -> Literal { - if !n.is_finite() { - panic!("Invalid float literal {}", n); - } - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::float(&n.to_string())) - } - - /// Creates a new suffixed floating-point literal. - /// - /// This constructor will create a literal like `1.0f64` where the value - /// specified is the preceding part of the token and `f64` is the suffix of - /// the token. This token will always be inferred to be an `f64` in the - /// compiler. - /// Literals created from negative numbers may not survive rountrips through - /// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal). - /// - /// # Panics - /// - /// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for - /// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic. - pub fn f64_suffixed(n: f64) -> Literal { - if !n.is_finite() { - panic!("Invalid float literal {}", n); - } - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::f64(&n.to_string())) - } - - /// String literal. - pub fn string(string: &str) -> Literal { - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::string(string)) - } - - /// Character literal. - pub fn character(ch: char) -> Literal { - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::character(ch)) - } - - /// Byte string literal. - pub fn byte_string(bytes: &[u8]) -> Literal { - Literal(bridge::client::Literal::byte_string(bytes)) - } - - /// Returns the span encompassing this literal. - pub fn span(&self) -> Span { - Span(self.0.span()) - } - - /// Configures the span associated for this literal. - pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) { - self.0.set_span(span.0); - } - - /// Returns a `Span` that is a subset of `self.span()` containing only the - /// source bytes in range `range`. Returns `None` if the would-be trimmed - /// span is outside the bounds of `self`. - // FIXME(SergioBenitez): check that the byte range starts and ends at a - // UTF-8 boundary of the source. otherwise, it's likely that a panic will - // occur elsewhere when the source text is printed. - // FIXME(SergioBenitez): there is no way for the user to know what - // `self.span()` actually maps to, so this method can currently only be - // called blindly. For example, `to_string()` for the character 'c' returns - // "'\u{63}'"; there is no way for the user to know whether the source text - // was 'c' or whether it was '\u{63}'. - pub fn subspan>(&self, range: R) -> Option { - // HACK(eddyb) something akin to `Option::cloned`, but for `Bound<&T>`. - fn cloned_bound(bound: Bound<&T>) -> Bound { - match bound { - Bound::Included(x) => Bound::Included(x.clone()), - Bound::Excluded(x) => Bound::Excluded(x.clone()), - Bound::Unbounded => Bound::Unbounded, - } - } - - self.0.subspan(cloned_bound(range.start_bound()), cloned_bound(range.end_bound())).map(Span) - } -} - -// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display` -// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two). -// impl ToString for Literal { -// fn to_string(&self) -> String { -// TokenStream::from(TokenTree::from(self.clone())).to_string() -// } -// } - -/// Prints the literal as a string that should be losslessly convertible -/// back into the same literal (except for possible rounding for floating point literals). -impl fmt::Display for Literal { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(&self.to_string()) - } -} - -impl fmt::Debug for Literal { - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - // FIXME(eddyb) `Literal` should not expose internal `Debug` impls. - self.0.fmt(f) - } -} -- cgit v1.2.3