//! In rust, it is possible to have a value, a type and a macro with the same //! name without conflicts. //! //! `PerNs` (per namespace) captures this. use hir_expand::MacroDefId; use crate::{item_scope::ItemInNs, visibility::Visibility, ModuleDefId}; #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)] pub struct PerNs { pub types: Option<(ModuleDefId, Visibility)>, pub values: Option<(ModuleDefId, Visibility)>, pub macros: Option<(MacroDefId, Visibility)>, } impl Default for PerNs { fn default() -> Self { PerNs { types: None, values: None, macros: None } } } impl PerNs { pub fn none() -> PerNs { PerNs { types: None, values: None, macros: None } } pub fn values(t: ModuleDefId, v: Visibility) -> PerNs { PerNs { types: None, values: Some((t, v)), macros: None } } pub fn types(t: ModuleDefId, v: Visibility) -> PerNs { PerNs { types: Some((t, v)), values: None, macros: None } } pub fn both(types: ModuleDefId, values: ModuleDefId, v: Visibility) -> PerNs { PerNs { types: Some((types, v)), values: Some((values, v)), macros: None } } pub fn macros(macro_: MacroDefId, v: Visibility) -> PerNs { PerNs { types: None, values: None, macros: Some((macro_, v)) } } pub fn is_none(&self) -> bool { self.types.is_none() && self.values.is_none() && self.macros.is_none() } pub fn take_types(self) -> Option { self.types.map(|it| it.0) } pub fn take_types_vis(self) -> Option<(ModuleDefId, Visibility)> { self.types } pub fn take_values(self) -> Option { self.values.map(|it| it.0) } pub fn take_macros(self) -> Option { self.macros.map(|it| it.0) } pub fn filter_visibility(self, mut f: impl FnMut(Visibility) -> bool) -> PerNs { let _p = profile::span("PerNs::filter_visibility"); PerNs { types: self.types.filter(|(_, v)| f(*v)), values: self.values.filter(|(_, v)| f(*v)), macros: self.macros.filter(|(_, v)| f(*v)), } } pub fn with_visibility(self, vis: Visibility) -> PerNs { PerNs { types: self.types.map(|(it, _)| (it, vis)), values: self.values.map(|(it, _)| (it, vis)), macros: self.macros.map(|(it, _)| (it, vis)), } } pub fn or(self, other: PerNs) -> PerNs { PerNs { types: self.types.or(other.types), values: self.values.or(other.values), macros: self.macros.or(other.macros), } } pub fn iter_items(self) -> impl Iterator { let _p = profile::span("PerNs::iter_items"); self.types .map(|it| ItemInNs::Types(it.0)) .into_iter() .chain(self.values.map(|it| ItemInNs::Values(it.0)).into_iter()) .chain(self.macros.map(|it| ItemInNs::Macros(it.0)).into_iter()) } }