To be accurate, only their methods are excluded, the trait themselves are still available.
I also excluded a bunch of std traits by default. Some less opinionated, like `AsRef`, which should never be used directly except in generic scenarios (and won't be excluded there), some more opinionated, like the ops traits, which I know some users sometimes want to use directly. Either way it's configurable.
It should be pretty easy to extend support to excluding only specific methods, but I didn't do that currently.
Traits configured to be excluded are resolved in each completion request from scratch. If this proves too expensive, it is easy enough to cache them in the DB.
Which caused the macros of the popular `tracing` crate to not offer completions.
The reason is rather complicated: it boils down to macro ignoring their input and completion always choosing the first expansion.
This mainly aids in error recovery but also makes it a bit easier to handle lifetime resolution.
While doing so it also came apparent that we were not actually lowering lifetime outlives relationships within lifetime parameter declaration bounds, so this fixes that.
If a user ever sees the completion marker, it's confusing to see text
about IntelliJ. Use a string that's more explicitly about completion
for rust-analyzer.
This PR touches a lot of parts. But the main changes are changing
`hir_expand::Name` to be raw edition-dependently and only when necessary
(unrelated to how the user originally wrote the identifier),
and changing `is_keyword()` and `is_raw_identifier()` to be edition-aware
(this was done in #17896, but the FIXMEs were fixed here).
It is possible that I missed some cases, but most IDE parts should properly
escape (or not escape) identifiers now.
The rules of thumb are:
- If we show the identifier to the user, its rawness should be determined
by the edition of the edited crate. This is nice for IDE features,
but really important for changes we insert to the source code.
- For tests, I chose `Edition::CURRENT` (so we only have to (maybe) update
tests when an edition becomes stable, to avoid churn).
- For debugging tools (helper methods and logs), I used `Edition::LATEST`.
This commit also adds `tracing` to NotificationDispatcher/RequestDispatcher,
bumps `rust-analyzer-salsa` to 0.17.0-pre.6, `always-assert` to 0.2, and
removes the homegrown `hprof` implementation in favor of a vendored
tracing-span-tree.
Complete exported macros in `#[macro_use($0)]`
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15657.
Originally added a test case for incomplete input:
```rust
#[test]
fn completes_incomplete_syntax() {
check(
r#"
//- /dep.rs crate:dep
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! foo {
() => {};
}
//- /main.rs crate:main deps:dep
#[macro_use($0
extern crate dep;
"#,
expect![[r#"
ma foo
"#]],
)
}
```
but couldn't make it pass and removed it 😅 Our current recovering logic doesn't work for token trees and for this code:
```rust
#[macro_use(
extern crate lazy_static;
fn main() {}
```
we ended up with this syntax tree:
```
SOURCE_FILE@0..53
ATTR@0..52
POUND@0..1 "#"
L_BRACK@1..2 "["
META@2..52
PATH@2..11
PATH_SEGMENT@2..11
NAME_REF@2..11
IDENT@2..11 "macro_use"
TOKEN_TREE@11..52
L_PAREN@11..12 "("
WHITESPACE@12..13 "\n"
EXTERN_KW@13..19 "extern"
WHITESPACE@19..20 " "
CRATE_KW@20..25 "crate"
WHITESPACE@25..26 " "
IDENT@26..37 "lazy_static"
SEMICOLON@37..38 ";"
WHITESPACE@38..40 "\n\n"
FN_KW@40..42 "fn"
WHITESPACE@42..43 " "
IDENT@43..47 "main"
TOKEN_TREE@47..49
L_PAREN@47..48 "("
R_PAREN@48..49 ")"
WHITESPACE@49..50 " "
TOKEN_TREE@50..52
L_CURLY@50..51 "{"
R_CURLY@51..52 "}"
WHITESPACE@52..53 "\n"
```
Maybe we can try to parse the token tree in `crates/ide-completion/src/context/analysis.rs` but I'm not sure what's the best way forward.