The idea here is that the crate graph may change over time, but library source file contents *never* will (or really never should). Disconnecting the two means that queries that depend on library sources will not need to re-validatewhen the crate graph changes (unless they depend on the crate graph in some capacity).
Fix#19322
Sometimes there are 185 "Generate delegate" assists with the same
assist_id and asssist_kind. This commit introduces and additional
differentiator: assist_subtype. Therefore, when the LSP client sends
an assist resolve request, rust-analyzer only need to compute edits
for a single assist instead of 185.
Specifically, when a rename of a local will change some code that refers it to refer another local, or some code that refer another local to refer to it.
We do it by introducing a dummy edit with an annotation. I'm not a fond of this approach, but I don't think LSP has a better way.
This is required to format evaluated consts, because we need trait env, and it needs the crate (currently it uses the last crate in topological order, which is wrong, the next commit will fix that).
Use `std::mem::{size_of, size_of_val, align_of, align_of_val}` from the
prelude instead of importing or qualifying them.
These functions were added to all preludes in Rust 1.80.
Split manual.adoc into markdown files, one for each chapter.
For the parts of the manual that are generated from source code doc
comments, update the comments to use markdown syntax and update the
code generators to write to `generated.md` files.
For the weekly release, stop copying the .adoc files to the
`rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer.github.io` at release time. Instead,
we'll sync the manual hourly from this repository.
See https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer.github.io/pull/226
for the sync. This PR should be merged first, and that PR needs to be
merged before the next weekly release.
This change is based on #15795, but rebased and updated. I've also
manually checked each page for markdown syntax issues and fixed any I
encountered.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Josh Rotenberg <joshrotenberg@gmail.com>