//! HIR (previously known as descriptors) provides a high-level object oriented //! access to Rust code. //! //! The principal difference between HIR and syntax trees is that HIR is bound //! to a particular crate instance. That is, it has cfg flags and features //! applied. So, the relation between syntax and HIR is many-to-one. pub mod db; #[cfg(test)] mod mock; #[macro_use] mod marks; mod query_definitions; mod path; pub mod source_binder; mod ids; mod macros; mod name; mod module_tree; mod nameres; mod adt; mod type_ref; mod ty; mod impl_block; mod expr; mod code_model_api; mod code_model_impl; use crate::{ db::HirDatabase, name::{AsName, KnownName}, ids::{DefKind, SourceItemId, SourceFileItemId, SourceFileItems}, }; pub use self::{ path::{Path, PathKind}, name::Name, ids::{HirFileId, DefId, DefLoc, MacroCallId, MacroCallLoc}, macros::{MacroDef, MacroInput, MacroExpansion}, nameres::{ItemMap, PerNs, Namespace, Resolution}, ty::Ty, impl_block::{ImplBlock, ImplItem}, code_model_impl::function::{FnScopes, ScopesWithSyntaxMapping}, }; pub use self::code_model_api::{ Crate, CrateDependency, Def, Module, ModuleSource, Problem, Struct, Enum, EnumVariant, Function, FnSignature, ScopeEntryWithSyntax, Static, Const, Trait, Type, };